12-29-2015, 04:03 AM
(This post was last modified: 12-29-2015, 04:37 AM by Raccoon Sam.)
It appears that.... The wav is sliced at intervals of 28112 samples. First there's 28112 samples for the first part's left channel, then another 28112 chunk for the first part's right channel. Then the drum track(?) the same way, 28112 left, 28112 right. Then the second part, left and right. Drums again, left, right... Repeat this 1568 times (1568 * 28112 = 44079616, which is, according to vgmstream, the total amount of samples) and get re-ordering. If it helps to visualise, That WAV is a monotrack:
/ L: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 ...
\ R: -
But you want it to be two stereo tracks:
/L: 1 5 ...
|R: 2 6 ...
|L: 3 7 ...
\R: 4 8 ...
I don't know if there's a method to automatise this. Maybe an audio editor that supports scripting?
EDIT: Apparently Adobe Audition can "record favorites."
Favorites let you record one or more operations in the Waveform Editor as a single command that you can access from the Favorites menu or run on multiple files as a part of a batch process.
I guess... that if you recorded a favorite that cuts a 28112 sample-long clip, pastes it below the current track and does it again three times with different tracks and saved THAT as a keyboard shortcut, you could press that hotkey 392 times and have your neatly tidied multi-track. Sounds ass-backwards but that's all I got sorry.