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I find the .cue file method much faster and easier than chopping up a mix into separate files ...
okay, here's a little .cue tutorial ...
code:
FILE 604.wav WAVE
TRACK 01 AUDIO
INDEX 01 00:00:00
TRACK 02 AUDIO
INDEX 01 05:56:36
TRACK 03 AUDIO
INDEX 01 11:15:04
TRACK 04 AUDIO
INDEX 01 17:34:15
TRACK 05 AUDIO
INDEX 01 23:27:01
TRACK 06 AUDIO
INDEX 01 30:17:62
TRACK 07 AUDIO
INDEX 01 37:53:02
TRACK 08 AUDIO
INDEX 01 41:39:09
TRACK 09 AUDIO
INDEX 01 48:05:60
TRACK 10 AUDIO
INDEX 01 54:53:18
TRACK 11 AUDIO
INDEX 01 60:59:67
Okay, the first line
FILE filename.wav WAVE
contains the file name relative to the .cue file - if you have it in the same directory just go filename.wav otherwise type the complete path ie. c:\mymusic\mix\filename.wav
All the other lines contain the cue points where you want to have a track marker. The timecode is in format
minute:second:frame
keep in mind that there is 75 frames on a CD (i think) so 74 is the highest value you can use (00 - 74). A good way to find the cue points is to load the mix in CoolEdit and then go
View -> Display Time Format -> Compact Disc
Then just listen to the mix and copy the timecode values in your .cue file. As easy as that.
peace
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