If you were to import from your ITunes library, here's what you would do.

disclaimer: I'm using Windows XP.


1. Go into the my documents folder.
2. Go into the my music folder.
3. Go into the iTunes folder.
4. Go into the iTunes media folder.
5. Go into the music folder.
6. From here, you would have to locate the folder containing the audio you'd like to edit. You should be able to open the files in Goldwave.

You might be better off, ripping the audio from the CD.
1. Press alt-T for the tools menu.

2. Press enter on CD Reader.
3. If you have more than one CD drive on your machine, select the drive where the CD is. 4. Press the tab key six times. This will put you in the list of tracks on the CD. 5. Now you need to tell Goldwave which tracks you want to copy to the computer. Tip: Files that are checked will be copied. 6. If you want to rename the tracks, here's an opportunity to do that. Tab to the rename button and press the space bar and type the desired name. Repeat this step for each track.
7. Tab to the save button and press the space bar.
8. Here you tell Goldwave where to save the files and what format you want them saved in, [Wave, MP3, etc.].
9. Press the space bar on the OK button.
----- Original Message ----- From: "Colin Howard" <co...@pobox.com>
To: "PC Audio Discussion List" <pc-audio@pc-audio.org>
Sent: Saturday, April 02, 2011 6:16 PM
Subject: Re: How to inport to Goldwave?


Greetings,

What format is the song, .mp3 or .wav or windows media or some form of which
I know not?

If .mp3 or .wav, can you see it in the ITunes system, sorry I don't know
much about ITunes, I assume there must be folders in which case, you must be
able to access these from GW in the usual way.

If you cannot access the song via the folders, to get it off the cd, very
simple.

Put cd onto pc and go into tools and down to cd reader and enter, the rest
should be self-explanatory, just make sure you know the track required and
rip it onto your hard disk, then work on it as with any other GW file,
saving it as desired.

To use fadeout, place start marker at the place where you wish the fade to
begin, the finish marker must be at the end of the file, or if you wish to
lose the very end, delete as with any other part of the file.  Now go into
effects, then u for volume, o for fade out, then I assume you want to fade
to nothing, so cursor down the presets to the one which says something like fade to silence linear, you should then get a nice, gentle fade, if you use the fade to silence logrythmic the fade is much more sudden and sharp, it is
not gentle, it starts slowly and fades faster and faster.

Hope these few comments are of use.


From Colin Howard, who lives in Fareham on
the coast of Central Southern England.

One of these days I may even get onto Facebook,
twitter or skype, so you can't escape from me forever!!

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