Hello, I downloaded and installed, “Silent Subliminals” Plugin, restarted Audacity… Opened an mp3 file, highlighted most of it, then following directions… clicked on Encode… At first it did nothing, then I seleted part of the mp3 again and pressed encode again… It was a 2:33 minute mp3, I selected about 1:46 of it… The mp3 looked like a flat line with a few dots… then from 1:46 on, it was the normal wave file… I listened to it, it was silent until the 1:46, then I could hear the remainder… I think it worked? Thanks… James
That MIGHT be OK. Does Decode bring it back? (I don’t think it comes-back perfectly.
Note that if you export as MP3, MP3 compression works (partly) by throwing-away stuff you can’t hear. So there’s a good chance of loosing some, or all, of the subliminal.
If you want to do that, try decoding immediately after running the subliminal plug-in before exporting. Then open the new MP3 and try decoding that.
I exported it as .wav file then converted it -1.818 pitch, then converted some to subliminal… I’m just experimenting… I like it… I was thinking that it might be cool, to make a plugin that generates solfeggio frequencies, or where you can enter different frequencies, like Royal Rife frequencies… if thats possible? Thanks James
In case you don’t know this A=440Hz is a tuning standard. A=432Hz is a different tuning standard. Regular music (and all normal-natural sound) contains many-many frequencies and many simultaneous frequencies.
You can make a selection and then select Analyze ->Plot Spectrum to see the frequency content.
An additional twist is that usually not all notes are used in a song so a lot of music doesn’t have any A-notes. Or it may have different A-notes in different octaves but no 440Hz A.
or where you can enter different frequencies, like Royal Rife frequencies…
You can pitch-shift by a different percentage or you can generate any frequency you want with Generate ->Tone.
And of course, the Silent Subliminal plug-in shifts the frequencies.
Even if Rife “technology” worked, it’s radio waves, not audio.