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PROBLEM with JOINING MP3s...i HEAR where i JOINED them and DONT WANT TO,,,....HELP =(
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| tiesto14 |
ok i am having trouble JOINING a bunch of MP3s....
heres what i wanna do:
i have a Live set that my brother used a cue sheet for and cut up into tracks...ok
the problem is he completley MESSED up the track times and i wanna redo it..but he deleted the original uncut MP3 of the set..
i have tryed HJSPLIT and the prog on TranceAddict that people suggested i use....
the problem is this..when i go and join the tracks to make 1 LARGE MP3 i can hear where the tracks where joined..sorta like a "BLIP" i guess u can call it..or a skip when each part comes that i joined...
my question is this...how can i join all these tracks and then when i listen to the set NOT HEAR where i joined them at??????
or am i screwed? |
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| stella |
| depends how he cut them in the first place. You did say, and you don't say how the seperate audio tracks are stored. my guess is that you'll be better off loading the parts into something like CoolEdit and joining them. |
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| liquidxxd |
| hmm, i think when you cut them in wav and then turn it to mp3, it loses part of the original mp3, best bet is to just go redownload the whole set and then writea cue for it |
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| Azareal |
i use a little known program for mastering cd's and making mixed sets - its called multiquencer, and is the cats bullocks. I am extremely familiar with live mixing tools on the computer - ie pcdj / traktor, and use them when doing live sets, but when I want to take the time to put together a cd and get it down perfect, multiquencer does just that.
Now in response to your problem, a lot of people don't realize that mp3's have a millisecond of dead air at the end of any track. It goes largely unnoticed because even when queing up songs in winamp, winamp takes a second itself between tracks, and that extra millisecond of dead air from the last mp3 gets lost in the winamp 'dead-air'.
In order to fix this program rightfully, take your mp3's, convert them to wave format (which will allow you to see waveforms in multiquencer) then import them. Zoom in so a second of song takes up the whole screen, hit cntr-w to view the wave forms, and line up the two songs so that the end of one sound connects ass to front of the next. (You will be using 2 music tracks for this process, alternating one to the next as milliseconds of dead air overlap each other). As long as the song files are all from the same mix, you shoudn't need to adjust volume or anything else. When you have your cd all planned out, save to wave file, convert that fat bastard to a mp3, and you are good to go. If you have any questions, just pm me, Multiquencer is a tough program to find - and I might be able to help you locate it online.
Cheers
~Azareal |
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| Excite |
| load the WAV into Cool Edit then manually clip out the tracks and save them individually. Tedious, but no blips at all when you burn them disc-at-once. |
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| tiesto14 |
thanks for the advice...i would LOVE to redownload the set...but it is Tiesto's Dutch Dimensions set from 02.02 and that would take too long...LOL...i am a 56ker:( ......
and to load each track from that set into a waveform would take forever...isnt there a progrma that can join it 1,2,3 like HJSPLIT that wont cause that pause/blip/skip noise inbetween tracks?...otherwise i might just join them all and deal with the little millisecond of annoiance:( :( |
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