Quote:
Originally Posted by sportsfann46
I thought that Audacity was used more for editing songs after they were recorded. Not actually recording the song. Also, I do not think that Aucacity can import a music library as is with all of the song identifications, such as: artist, title, genre, rating system, lead singers, date released, and date recorded. Additionally, I do not beleive that it can review an entire library and normalize volume.
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You can record the whole album in
Audacity and amplify with it (it has the Normalize and Amplify features, but I don't really know which one is the right for you, or whether there is a better Audcity Effect that can be applied). Then you can save the whole album as an MP3 file and split it with mp3splt. The latter program can split MP3 files losslessly... although I don't think it can split automatically. Then you can tag your files either manually or with some auto tagging software.
Quote:
Originally Posted by sportsfann46
My volume problems come only when I copy my recorded LP's (via line in) to an MP3 player or CD, not when I copy my CD's to the MP3 player. (The line in music sounds as if it is muffled, the CD's and cassettes are fine. There just isn't any volume to it and it is such a drop off from the other music that it is irritating,). when I listen to music back through the computer, it ALL sounds normal.
Can Replay Music record from line-in (record player to receiver, receiver out to line-in computer) and do the other things as detailed above?
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I recommend to download a free demo version of
Replay Music and test whether it can amplify your music tracks to the level you need, whether it can split and tag your music tracks.
Also please note that the quality of your recordings depends a lot on a sound card that you have and even a cable that you use to connect your receiver and your sound card.