just bought 50 songs from itunes and......
-
john gordon
- Posts: 2680
- Joined: Tue Nov 11, 2003 12:24 am
- Location: Delaware
just bought 50 songs from itunes and......
i cant even use them in ableton i will never use itunes again. back to limewire,they suck 
Last edited by john gordon on Tue Sep 06, 2005 6:39 am, edited 1 time in total.
I don't understand your problem? Are they broken? Oh, they use a protected format. Eek! That's a $50 lesson. Does Limewire sell music or is just a place to steal it? I'm not familiar with it.
I believe that Apple is clear as to what you are buying so, it's not their fault. I refuse to buy most things from them 'cuz I like owning the artwork and being able to do with it what I want. You could try converting the files to MP3 or .Wav. Won't be the best quality, but if you are just gonna DJ them thru a PA it won't matter. Give it a try. Sorry, you didn't get what you expected, hopefully you got some cool tunes.
best,
-b
I believe that Apple is clear as to what you are buying so, it's not their fault. I refuse to buy most things from them 'cuz I like owning the artwork and being able to do with it what I want. You could try converting the files to MP3 or .Wav. Won't be the best quality, but if you are just gonna DJ them thru a PA it won't matter. Give it a try. Sorry, you didn't get what you expected, hopefully you got some cool tunes.
best,
-b
-
john gordon
- Posts: 2680
- Joined: Tue Nov 11, 2003 12:24 am
- Location: Delaware
iTunes uses a protected format that can only be played through iTunes on up to 5 computers, and is mainly geared towards to the general music consumer. The benefit is that royalties get paid to whomever needs to get them rather than stealing them via limewire. (Please do not start a debate on the whole file sharing thing)
The best solution and what i do is to burn your songs on a CD in "Audio CD" format, then re-import them as MP3s or AIFF (your preference will apply here)
Regards,
E
The best solution and what i do is to burn your songs on a CD in "Audio CD" format, then re-import them as MP3s or AIFF (your preference will apply here)
Regards,
E
common...ever heard of full duplex???for what do buy soundcards for a couple of hundred dollar/euro/yen???don´t be so foolish...
GET BACK TO THE OLD DAYS AND SAMPLE WHAT YOU WANNA USE!!!!!!!!!!!
what a pitty that ableton is so kind and gives us mp3....
GET BACK TO THE OLD DAYS AND SAMPLE WHAT YOU WANNA USE!!!!!!!!!!!
what a pitty that ableton is so kind and gives us mp3....
**********************************
* LIVE * 1031 + 1092 * LOGIC PRO 7
* ACCES VIRUS * MOTU 828
* TASCAM M-2600 * Sennheiser,AKG,Sure
**********************************
http://www.myspace.com/robstrobetracks
**********************************
* LIVE * 1031 + 1092 * LOGIC PRO 7
* ACCES VIRUS * MOTU 828
* TASCAM M-2600 * Sennheiser,AKG,Sure
**********************************
http://www.myspace.com/robstrobetracks
**********************************
You can also drag the files into iMovie and export them; you'll be free to use them anywhere after you do that.
I find it really disgusting that Apple have to use their own proprietary format for the Store; I think the customer should be given a choice.
One of the best on-line music stores is www.bleep.com; some files are even available in Flac.
And yes, Limewire is a stealing platform, but at least you can choose what you want..... and buy the product later if you like it (Martyn: I agree some mp3s sound horrible, but from 192kbit upwards it's ok.... and Apple claim their 128kbit AAC is superior to mp3)
R.
I find it really disgusting that Apple have to use their own proprietary format for the Store; I think the customer should be given a choice.
One of the best on-line music stores is www.bleep.com; some files are even available in Flac.
And yes, Limewire is a stealing platform, but at least you can choose what you want..... and buy the product later if you like it (Martyn: I agree some mp3s sound horrible, but from 192kbit upwards it's ok.... and Apple claim their 128kbit AAC is superior to mp3)
R.
cool...and we´re making music for 50 cent each download...
=)
great....
=)
great....
**********************************
* LIVE * 1031 + 1092 * LOGIC PRO 7
* ACCES VIRUS * MOTU 828
* TASCAM M-2600 * Sennheiser,AKG,Sure
**********************************
http://www.myspace.com/robstrobetracks
**********************************
* LIVE * 1031 + 1092 * LOGIC PRO 7
* ACCES VIRUS * MOTU 828
* TASCAM M-2600 * Sennheiser,AKG,Sure
**********************************
http://www.myspace.com/robstrobetracks
**********************************
Open iTunes. Record into Live with Soundflower. It's that easy.
Most of my Live playlist comes from the iTunes Music Store. I challenge anyone to listen critically to an iTunes AAC file and compare it to the original AIFF on studio monitors, let alone on a PA system.
Check out www.allofmp3.com. It's awesome, cost a fraction of the iTunes Music Store, and you can choose one of many download formats.
Most of my Live playlist comes from the iTunes Music Store. I challenge anyone to listen critically to an iTunes AAC file and compare it to the original AIFF on studio monitors, let alone on a PA system.
Check out www.allofmp3.com. It's awesome, cost a fraction of the iTunes Music Store, and you can choose one of many download formats.
-
Polyphonic
- Posts: 62
- Joined: Sun Jul 17, 2005 11:40 am
Alternatively, carry on using iTunes and just convert them.
What? You say they are protected? And? You can STILL convert them - it's amazing what Google throws up, isn't it?
http://hymn-project.org/
This program removes the protection. Then, use another program to convert to MP3 or any other file format of your choice. Use Google to find a program to do that.
What? You say they are protected? And? You can STILL convert them - it's amazing what Google throws up, isn't it?
http://hymn-project.org/
This program removes the protection. Then, use another program to convert to MP3 or any other file format of your choice. Use Google to find a program to do that.
Would you say AAC is on par with CD quality?hambone1 wrote:Open iTunes. Record into Live with Soundflower. It's that easy.
Most of my Live playlist comes from the iTunes Music Store. I challenge anyone to listen critically to an iTunes AAC file and compare it to the original AIFF on studio monitors, let alone on a PA system.
Check out www.allofmp3.com. It's awesome, cost a fraction of the iTunes Music Store, and you can choose one of many download formats.
It's all relative to the original recording's quality, but even high dynamic range, large frequency band songs seem full and clear without the phasing that plagues inferior compression schemes and settings. Same with 320kb MP3s from allofmp3.com. They're superb. Maybe on an oscilloscope not as good as the original CD, but I don't think anyone will be bringing one, or a 20KHz+ bat or dog for that matter, to my performances.
If I spent all of my time comparing and constrasting this and that formats, I wouldn't get anything done. Apple's AACs and allofmp3.com's 320kbps MP3s sound great to me and I personally see no further need to waste time splitting hairs!
If I spent all of my time comparing and constrasting this and that formats, I wouldn't get anything done. Apple's AACs and allofmp3.com's 320kbps MP3s sound great to me and I personally see no further need to waste time splitting hairs!
Dude... here is what you do, and this is *not* hard and isn't a difficult work-a-round...
Burn your tracks to multiple CDs... iTunes will remember what all the track info is for those CDs...
In preferences tell it that when you rip a cd you want it to do it as an MP3 and not an AAC... set the bitrate to whatever you want (supposedly AAC is a bit better than MP3, so you might want the bitrate to be the next level higher than your AAC files were saved on your system as).
Then just rip those files... now they have all the track info and file names and everything you need without too much more work.
Personally I'd say iTunes isn't really that bad if you want tracks... especially since how many albums come out with a load of crap and only 1-2 good tracks... maybe 3 if you're lucky. So for those 50 tracks that cost you $50 on itunes, you'd have to spend probably $300+ just to get the same tracks in conventional cd format, and I'm probably being generous.
Good Luck man,
Greg
Burn your tracks to multiple CDs... iTunes will remember what all the track info is for those CDs...
In preferences tell it that when you rip a cd you want it to do it as an MP3 and not an AAC... set the bitrate to whatever you want (supposedly AAC is a bit better than MP3, so you might want the bitrate to be the next level higher than your AAC files were saved on your system as).
Then just rip those files... now they have all the track info and file names and everything you need without too much more work.
Personally I'd say iTunes isn't really that bad if you want tracks... especially since how many albums come out with a load of crap and only 1-2 good tracks... maybe 3 if you're lucky. So for those 50 tracks that cost you $50 on itunes, you'd have to spend probably $300+ just to get the same tracks in conventional cd format, and I'm probably being generous.
Good Luck man,
Greg
-
john gordon
- Posts: 2680
- Joined: Tue Nov 11, 2003 12:24 am
- Location: Delaware