Convert cassettes into MP3s Video
Convert cassettes into MP3s Video Transcript
There are some great recordings out there that are trap on cassette tape. To rescue them, I'm gonna show you my preferred method for turning tapes into MP3's. Now there are dozen ways to do this but I like this one because it's free and it's fast. First step, make sure you're dealing with a recording that you can't easily buy on CD or MP3. Check eBay, check iTunes but avoid the hassle of converting if you can. Next, find the tape deck and the best case scenario you can find one like this one that has RCA output and is in good condition an old Walkman will do too if you're not too picky. Now figure out how the deck is gonna connect to your computer. In this case, I have RCA outputs coming out of the tape deck and a mini jack stereo mic going into the PC. If you have an older PC with a blue line input, that's the preferred way to go. If your computer doesn't have a line input like this Mac, you'll need to get a USB audio adapter. Don't go overboard. You can find solutions for under $50. Next, install a free program called Audacity which is available for both Mac and PC. Once, that's installed, let's do a sample recording to make sure everything is working. Check up here to make sure that the recording input is set to where the tape deck is connected. If you're using the mike input, turn that mike in all the way down to line level, now hit record and hit play on the tape deck and if all goes well, you should see the wave form of the tapes audio right in front of you. After a few seconds, hit stop and listen back to the recording to make sure it sounds okay. Assuming it does, you're ready to do the whole thing. Rewind the tape, hit record on Audacity plus play on the tape and now just let the whole side play through. Don't forget to stop recording when it's over. Now listen back to the recording to make sure everything checks out. To maximize the volume, I'm gonna go into the edit menu and select all and then go into the FX menue and select amplify. By default it will set itself to the maximum amount that recording can be boosted before distorting. Hit okay. Next comes the real pro moves that will cut the project time in half. Instead of individually copying and pasting each songs into each own file, we're gonna drop markers at the beginning of each song and then export them all in one batch. Find the beginning of the first song and click on the wave form to place the cursor there. Then go to the tracks menu and select add label, add selection. Since this is the first song, I'll label it number one. Now, do this for the rest of the tracks, numbering them as you go. Typically, you can eyeball this by looking at the spaces between tracks but be sure to double check your markers. A dramatic pause in the middle of the song can easily fake you out. If you wanna do this really fast, learn the keyboard shortcut for adding a label. On a PC, control V will let you fly through this. When you get to the end, trim the silence off of the last track by selecting the silence and hitting delete. Finally, use the export multiple command in the file menu. You'll seen an intimidating screen of options but all you need to worry about is that export format is set to wave and at the export location is somewhere handy. I would opt for a new folder on your desktop. Hit export and you'll be shown a series of windows where you can enter in track information. I have a better method for adding track information which I'll show you at the end. So, for now make sure that the numbers you labeled to each track uppers here as the track names. If so, just hit okay on each one of them to close them. Now, Audacity will export individual wave files for each of the tracks you labeled on the side A. Now you can flip your tape over and go to the same recording process with side B. Just make sure you pick up the number in where you left off at the end of side A. Once you get wave files on both sides of the tape, it's time to start archiving them and converting them into MP3. Now, there's a few tweaks you could have so that you're exporting Mp3s right out of Audacity. For me though, I'm gonna make iTunes my last opt so that I can archive my high quality wave files to CD, convert to MP3 and add track info more quickly. So, let's do it. Make a new playlist and name it after your tape. Drag your files on to this playlist to add them to iTunes and wait for them to pull over. Make sure they're in the right order and then right click on the playlist to burn the files to CD. You'll see options here to burn them as either an audio CD that you can play on a CD player or a data CD where you can copy the files to another computer. Either one is fine for the job of archiving so it's up to you. Burn it, label it, file it away. Now to convert this to MP3, go into the iTunes preferences, open the import settings and make sure that the import format is set to MP3 at whatever quality you want. Hit okay and go back to your playlist, select all of the tracks, right click and select create MP3 version. When that's done, click on your musical library and sort by date added to see the MP3 versions of the songs you just created at the top of the list above the high quality wave versions. Select just the MP3 version by holding down the shift key and then go up to the file menu and select get info. Now you can enter in the artist and the album info for all the tracks at once and even add cover art then hit okay. To enter the individual track names, select just one of the tracks and get info. Go info pane and answer the track title then hit next to enter the next title all the way through to the end. When you're done, hit okay. That's it. You're done. You have an MP3 version of your tape, plus the playlist and a backup CD of the high quality wave files. For more tips like these, visit howto. CNET.com and if you have any tips for me or request for other how to's, you can find me on Facebook and Twitter. For CNET.com, I'm Donald Bell.
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If you've ever sat around with friends and mourned the death of the mixtape, you'll certainly appreciate the first half of today's episode of CNET's The 404 Podcast. While Jeff was at home for the break, he stumbled upon a a collection of old cassette tapes including the Cool Side/Awesome Side mix you see up there.
Turn LPs into digital media files - Getting started
Do not toss all that precious vinyl into the rubbish bin just yet. We will show you how to turn those old records into digital music files.
Turn LPs into digital media files - Make your connections
Do not toss all that precious vinyl into the rubbish bin just yet. We will show you how to turn those old records into digital music files.
Turn LPs into digital media files - Adjust the volume
Do not toss all that precious vinyl into the rubbish bin just yet. We will show you how to turn those old records into digital music files.
Turn LPs into digital media files - Begin recording
Do not toss all that precious vinyl into the rubbish bin just yet. We will show you how to turn those old records into digital music files.
The names Quasimoto and Madlib have been linked for years, yet they've never been seen in the same room together. In fact, Quasimoto's never been seen in the same room with anyone ? he's The Unseen. But you can hear him - and there's no mistaking what he sounds like. Peanut Butter Wolf first heard him off a dusty old cassette, one of Madlib?s infamous beat tapes ? the kind he?d make to listen to himself, maybe pass around to crew. Madlib and Quas had been up in Lost Gates, somewhere near Oxnard, CA, making music for years fueled by Top Ramen and shrooms without the slightest intention of releasing it to the masses. Wolf got it out though ? after some begging and pleading, and after signing a contract with Quas vowing not to reveal his name. The Unseen came out in 2000 and caught praise by fans and critics alike. SPIN went off on Quasimoto's "recipe for resin-caked jazz and crusty comedy samples as a new flavor for the bland world of mainstream rap" and stuck him smack between Madonna and Outkast in their best of the year list. URB too named the album one of the best of the year. Jon Caramanica (Rolling Stone/Village Voice) wrote an essay called "Blind Faith-Quasimoto's Backdoor Truth? choosing to describe the album as a revelation or ?strange dream? rather than a hip hop LP. In the tradition of artistic "role playing" in black music, Quas was compared favorably to RZA, Kool Keith, and even Prince (City Pages, St. Paul/Minneapolis). Another dude wrote that rap music "hasn?t been this far out since 3 Feet High and Rising" (Sleazenation). And a few commented on the voice. What a voice. Was it a tree-blazin? ghetto chipmunk? A cartoon Martian? Naw, it?s neither - but close. Lord Quas, personally, is more bizarre than Michael Jackson in a playpen, and he likewise demands a high level of privacy. Madlib and the heads at Stones Throw have been dodging questions about Lord Quas for years. Who is he? Why won?t he perform live? When?s the next album? Mostly that last question. The answer is now. Quasimoto is back with 27 tracks and 68 minutes of straight boom music. The Further Adventures find Lord Quas still digging for records, rolling blunts, and smackin? dudes with bricks. Madlib, for his part, appears to have been saving some of his best beats for Quas, and some that others were maybe afraid to touch. Consider the book on Hip Hop thrown out the window. Quas probably smoked it. They?ve got MF DOOM along for a reprise of the Madvillain-Quas collab on "Closer." (Madvillain ? that's where we last heard from Madlib & Lord Quas, on the album named as one of the best of 2004 by GQ, Rolling Stone, Spin, XLR8R, Village Voice, and a long list of others.) They've got M.E.D. from the Lootpack family up on "The Exclusive." Melvin Van Peebles (legendary filmmaker, the "Baadasssss" himself) shows up again on several tracks, as he did on The Unseen, channeled through the officially sanctioned use of a sampler. Madlib also takes the mic for several tracks ? among them "Rappcats," the ultimate ode to 80s hip hop; "Raw Addict Part 2," the ultimate ode to crate digging and sampling; "Another Demo Tape," the track that might result in his never again being given a CD demo from a stranger. Quasimoto's at no loss for words though. With some wild tales of crime sprees, kidnappings, and a fetish for some booty, we can assume he?ll still be known as "the Bad Character." Watch for a video for the lead track "Bullyshit" in May, followed by a short tour, for which Quasimoto may or may not show up.