IRCAM to HCOM Converter

Convert academic IRCAM audio to HCOM online

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IRCAM to HCOM

Move audio from the academic IRCAM format into HCOM — making research recordings accessible for vintage Macintosh preservation.

Any Platform

Convert IRCAM files without installing Csound or academic audio tools. Process your research audio from any modern browser.

Hassle-Free

IRCAM files convert to HCOM rapidly on our cloud servers. Upload your research audio and receive the output promptly.

How to convert IRCAM to HCOM

1

Select files from Computer, Google Drive, Dropbox, URL or by dragging it on the page.

2

Choose hcom or any other format you need as a result (more than 200 formats supported)

3

Let the file convert and you can download your hcom file right afterwards

About formats

IRCAM sound files originate from the Institut de Recherche et Coordination Acoustique/Musique — one of the world's foremost computer music laboratories, founded by composer Pierre Boulez in Paris. The format was created in the early 1980s to serve the research needs of IRCAM and has since been adopted by academic and artistic communities working at the intersection of science and sound. An IRCAM file begins with a 1024-byte header containing a magic number, sample rate, channel count, and an encoding type field that supports linear PCM (16/32-bit integer and 32-bit float), mu-law, and A-law variants. The header block also accommodates free-form annotation text, allowing researchers to embed experiment metadata directly in the audio file. Because the payload is uncompressed by default, recordings maintain full fidelity through successive analysis and resynthesis cycles — essential in psychoacoustic experimentation. Software such as Csound, libsndfile, and SoX reads and writes the format natively. Key advantages include a well-defined header that eliminates parsing ambiguity, support for floating-point samples essential in scientific DSP work, and deep roots in the computer music community ensuring continued tooling.
Developer: IRCAM
Initial release: 1983
HCOM is a Huffman-coded audio format from the early Macintosh era, designed to shrink digitized sound for distribution on floppy disks and bulletin board systems when storage was precious and modems were slow. The encoder takes 8-bit unsigned PCM input, computes a frequency table of sample-delta values, and builds an optimal Huffman tree that replaces common deltas with short bit sequences. Compression ratios of 2:1 or better were typical for speech recordings, a meaningful saving when a 3.5-inch floppy held only 800 KB. Files were distributed as Macintosh resource forks and played through utilities like SoundApp and the BinHex ecosystem that defined Mac software exchange in the late 1980s. The format supported sample rates up to 22.255 kHz, matching the output capabilities of original Macintosh sound hardware. Tools such as SoX retain HCOM decoding support, ensuring that archived recordings remain accessible decades later. HCOM holds three practical advantages for preservation work: lossless compression that recovers the original samples exactly, a self-contained Huffman table embedded in each file for dependency-free decoding, and historical prevalence across thousands of vintage Mac sound archives.
Developer: Apple Computer
Initial release: 1985

Frequently Asked Questions

Why convert IRCAM to HCOM?

HCOM provides Huffman-compressed vintage Mac audio. Converting IRCAM research audio to HCOM makes it accessible for vintage Macintosh preservation.

What opens HCOM files?

Classic Mac software, SoX, Mac emulators can open and play HCOM files without additional plugins or configuration.

What is IRCAM format?

IRCAM is a specialized academic audio format from the Institut de Recherche et Coordination Acoustique/Musique in Paris, used in computational musicology and acoustic research.

Is quality preserved in the conversion?

The conversion faithfully transfers audio from IRCAM to HCOM. Output quality depends on the target format encoding settings you choose.

Can I convert multiple IRCAM files?

Upload several IRCAM files and batch-convert them all to HCOM at once — efficient for processing research audio collections.