I do this kind of thing all the time. You need a sound card and an
audio patch cord that will connect between the output of the cassette
machine and the line in of the sound card. To record I prefer Goldwave
as you can not only record, but precisely edit the beginning and end of
each track or segment however you want the files to be and you can also
set the volume level to maximum without distortion and even do some
noise reduction in many cases. CDex will also record directly in mp3
format and you can turn on normalization to set the level but there's no
editing or noise reduction features. And you'll also want Nero or other
CD writing software and, of course, a CD-R drive which come with just
about every computer these days to turn the sound files to CD. If you
want audio CDs that will play on any CD player then you'll want to
record the files as .wav instead of mp3 but the process is the same
regardless of what kind of final CD you want. Mp3 files won't usually
play on audio CD players but should play on DVD players. Hope this helps.
B B
Roger
Lauren wrote:
Hi,
I have a couple of old recordings that were done on a 4-track cassette machine. Is there a way I can convert that to an audio cd?
Thank you.
Sincerely,
Lauren
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