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#1
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Posted to rec.audio.pro
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I have a number of WAV files obtained from various devices such as
Voice Recorders and a Music notation program. These play without any problem but won't Burn as an Audio Cd from Windows Media Player or some Burning programs . I've found that if I load them into Media Player and play them they will then burn. If I load them into Media Player and save them I can Burn the saved version any CD Burner. Any ideas on why they don't work without "doctoring"? regards Harry |
#2
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Posted to rec.audio.pro
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On Tue, 01 Nov 2011 21:19:24 +0000, harry wrote:
I have a number of WAV files obtained from various devices such as Voice Recorders and a Music notation program. These play without any problem but won't Burn as an Audio Cd from Windows Media Player or some Burning programs . I've found that if I load them into Media Player and play them they will then burn. If I load them into Media Player and save them I can Burn the saved version any CD Burner. Any ideas on why they don't work without "doctoring"? regards Harry A WAV file can contain all sorts of formats, only one of which will burn straight to CD - linear PCM. When you load the file into Media Player it gets decoded to the LPCM format which will burn nicely. d |
#3
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On 2/11/2011 8:19 AM, harry wrote:
I have a number of WAV files obtained from various devices such as Voice Recorders and a Music notation program. These play without any problem but won't Burn as an Audio Cd from Windows Media Player or some Burning programs . I've found that if I load them into Media Player and play them they will then burn. If I load them into Media Player and save them I can Burn the saved version any CD Burner. Any ideas on why they don't work without "doctoring"? regards Harry Check the bit rate and resolution. An audio CD is 44.1kHz and 16 bit. |
#4
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Posted to rec.audio.pro
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In message om, swanny
writes Check the bit rate and resolution. An audio CD is 44.1kHz and 16 bit. And stereo. Some of those recorders might record mono. You are doing the right thing in re-saving from a program that converts to the CD format, but be very wary of doing this in Windows 7 because of the sample rate converter problems.. -- Bill |
#5
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Posted to rec.audio.pro
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Bill wrote:
In message om, swanny writes Check the bit rate and resolution. An audio CD is 44.1kHz and 16 bit. And stereo. Some of those recorders might record mono. You are doing the right thing in re-saving from a program that converts to the CD format, but be very wary of doing this in Windows 7 because of the sample rate converter problems.. Or if you uase CD Architect you can chuck just about any format source file on the timeline and burn them to CD without giving it a second thought., You can also easily effect them individually or overall, fade them, level them, move them around , cross-fade them, chop bits off, re-arrange the event or bits thereof. geoff |
#6
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Posted to rec.audio.pro
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"geoff" writes:
Bill wrote: In message om, swanny writes Check the bit rate and resolution. An audio CD is 44.1kHz and 16 bit. And stereo. Some of those recorders might record mono. You are doing the right thing in re-saving from a program that converts to the CD format, but be very wary of doing this in Windows 7 because of the sample rate converter problems.. Or if you uase CD Architect you can chuck just about any format source file on the timeline and burn them to CD without giving it a second thought., You can also easily effect them individually or overall, fade them, level them, move them around , cross-fade them, chop bits off, re-arrange the event or bits thereof. Is there a version of CDarch later than 5.2 that supports processing (EQ, comp, and such) on individual components added to the project? You can add a gain line and change levels any place you want, but I've only found processing plug-ins as universal to the project. Thanks, Frank Mobile Audio -- |
#7
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Posted to rec.audio.pro
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Frank Stearns wrote:
"geoff" writes: Bill wrote: In message om, swanny writes Check the bit rate and resolution. An audio CD is 44.1kHz and 16 bit. And stereo. Some of those recorders might record mono. You are doing the right thing in re-saving from a program that converts to the CD format, but be very wary of doing this in Windows 7 because of the sample rate converter problems.. Or if you uase CD Architect you can chuck just about any format source file on the timeline and burn them to CD without giving it a second thought., You can also easily effect them individually or overall, fade them, level them, move them around , cross-fade them, chop bits off, re-arrange the event or bits thereof. Is there a version of CDarch later than 5.2 that supports processing (EQ, comp, and such) on individual components added to the project? You can add a gain line and change levels any place you want, but I've only found processing plug-ins as universal to the project. Look harder - in 5.2d you get a little FX-chain icon bottom right of every timeline event, as well as the over-all one on the Master. In fact that was even the case in 5.0 ! The only drawback is that all the plugins are effectively using processing power all the time, even on the not-current timeline event, so with a bunch of heavy-cpu-load plugs and a weak-to-moderate Pentium CPU, realtime preview can get a bit patchy. geoff |
#8
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Posted to rec.audio.pro
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![]() "geoff" wrote in message ... Bill wrote: In message om, swanny writes Check the bit rate and resolution. An audio CD is 44.1kHz and 16 bit. And stereo. Some of those recorders might record mono. You are doing the right thing in re-saving from a program that converts to the CD format, but be very wary of doing this in Windows 7 because of the sample rate converter problems.. Or if you uase CD Architect you can chuck just about any format source file on the timeline and burn them to CD without giving it a second thought., You can also easily effect them individually or overall, fade them, level them, move them around , cross-fade them, chop bits off, re-arrange the event or bits thereof. At a far lower price, even the OEM version of Nero will convert files on the fly so that they burn to a music CD. |
#9
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Arny Krueger wrote:
"geoff" wrote in message Or if you uase CD Architect you can chuck just about any format source file on the timeline and burn them to CD without giving it a second thought., You can also easily effect them individually or overall, fade them, level them, move them around , cross-fade them, chop bits off, re-arrange the event or bits thereof. At a far lower price, even the OEM version of Nero will convert files on the fly so that they burn to a music CD. I see some advantages of this for consumer use, but I find the notion of transparent format conversion absolutely terrifying. --scott -- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." |
#10
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Thanks for the advice everyone.
Harry |
#11
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"geoff" writes:
snips You can add a gain line and change levels any place you want, but I've only found processing plug-ins as universal to the project. Look harder - in 5.2d you get a little FX-chain icon bottom right of every timeline event, as well as the over-all one on the Master. In fact that was even the case in 5.0 ! Really! How sweet is that?! Thanks for the enlightment, Geoff! It's rare that I need to do this, but nice to now know I can. Frank Mobile Audio -- |
#12
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Bill wrote:
In message om, swanny writes Check the bit rate and resolution. An audio CD is 44.1kHz and 16 bit. And stereo. Some of those recorders might record mono. You are doing the right thing in re-saving from a program that converts to the CD format, but be very wary of doing this in Windows 7 because of the sample rate converter problems.. I tried making a CD with windows media player three times, first, only and last, this because it had/has the default behavior of normalizing all tracks. Not all that comes from we know best corporation is optimally configured out of the shrinkwrap ... it is usually a very good idea to take a tour of all settings and check the defaults and whether they should be changed. Kind regards Peter Larsen |
#13
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Peter Larsen:
I tried making a CD with windows media player three times, first, only and last, this because it had/has the default behavior of normalizing all tracks. At least in WMP 12 under Win7, you can switch that function off. Extras - Options - Burning IIRC iTunes has a similar function, though I´m not sure, if it´s active by default. Not all that comes from we know best corporation is optimally configured out of the shrinkwrap ... it is usually a very good idea to take a tour of all settings and check the defaults and whether they should be changed. Very true! In my experience, that applies to *most* programs, no matter which OS. |
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