Newbie here...sorry if this has been answered in other posts (didn't quite find it when searching).
I'm wondering if any of you know of some utility that might allow me to combine several AAC (.m4a) tracks into a single file with cross fading between the tracks.
I wouldn't have ever thought I needed to do such a thing, since I normally consider cross fading to be a function of the player in question (iPod limitations aside ). But unfortunately I've converted separate tracks from some vinyl albums (e.g. Beatles - Sgt Pepper's...) and ripped some CDs (e.g. Pink Floyd The Wall), that when played in their entirety really need to be cross faded. It's all fine and good if I play from standard WinAmp library or whatever player with cross fading features turned on, but not so good on my iPod or when streaming.
I know that with WinAmp, I could just play through the wave writer plugin with cross fading dsp turned on, but I'm trying to avoid converting from AAC (lossy) to WAV (lossless) and back to AAC (lossy). I guess I could also just re-rip the CDs in WAV or re-record the vinyl and add the cross fading before converting, but that's all a lot of work! :o
Anyone know a better way?
Thanks in advance.
jtbse
I'm wondering if any of you know of some utility that might allow me to combine several AAC (.m4a) tracks into a single file with cross fading between the tracks.
I wouldn't have ever thought I needed to do such a thing, since I normally consider cross fading to be a function of the player in question (iPod limitations aside ). But unfortunately I've converted separate tracks from some vinyl albums (e.g. Beatles - Sgt Pepper's...) and ripped some CDs (e.g. Pink Floyd The Wall), that when played in their entirety really need to be cross faded. It's all fine and good if I play from standard WinAmp library or whatever player with cross fading features turned on, but not so good on my iPod or when streaming.
I know that with WinAmp, I could just play through the wave writer plugin with cross fading dsp turned on, but I'm trying to avoid converting from AAC (lossy) to WAV (lossless) and back to AAC (lossy). I guess I could also just re-rip the CDs in WAV or re-record the vinyl and add the cross fading before converting, but that's all a lot of work! :o
Anyone know a better way?
Thanks in advance.
jtbse
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