Apply audio effects such as reverb and EQ directly to audio files or NumPy ndarrays.


Keywords
audio, music, sound
License
MIT
Install
pip install pysndfx==0.3.6

Documentation

pysndfx

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Apply audio effects such as reverb and EQ directly to audio files or NumPy ndarrays.

This is a lightweight Python wrapper for SoX, the Swiss Army knife of sound processing programs. Supported effects range from EQ and compression to phasers, reverb and pitch shifters.

Install

Install with pip as:

pip install pysndfx

The system must also have SoX installed (for Debian-based operating systems: apt install sox, or with Anaconda as conda install -c conda-forge sox)

Usage

First create an audio effects chain.

# Import the package and create an audio effects chain function.
from pysndfx import AudioEffectsChain

fx = (
    AudioEffectsChain()
    .highshelf()
    .reverb()
    .phaser()
    .delay()
    .lowshelf()
)

Then we can call the effects chain object with paths to audio files, or directly with NumPy ndarrays.

infile = 'my_audio_file.wav'
outfile = 'my_processed_audio_file.ogg'

# Apply phaser and reverb directly to an audio file.
fx(infile, outfile)

# Or, apply the effects directly to a ndarray.
from librosa import load
y, sr = load(infile, sr=None)
y = fx(y)

# Apply the effects and return the results as a ndarray.
y = fx(infile)

# Apply the effects to a ndarray but store the resulting audio to disk.
fx(x, outfile)

There's also experimental streaming support. Try applying reverb to a microphone input and listening to the results live like this:

python -c "from pysndfx import AudioEffectsChain; AudioEffectsChain().reverb()(None, None)"