Since I have a music studio and have dealt with this quite a few times I thought I would let you guys know how I've gotten around this issue. Bascially, I run Sonic Foundry's superb application Sound Forge which allows you to open any kinda of sound file (mp3's included). Once the mp3 is open you can zoom in to the end of the track or the strat of the track and find where the flatline starts, hightlight it, and then delete it. Now save the file and no more annoying pops or silences. Just do this for all the files and then burn it in your favorite audio burning software (I use Exact Audio Copy (EAC)) and burn disc at once, not track at once. I am pretty sure that sound forge offers a full working demo of the program if you dont want to pay a few hunder dollars for it. As well, I have been able to find cracks for Sonic Foundry products on the web too. You might also want to check out Cool Edit as that is another sound app that would allow you to do the same thing. thanks. c32 On Tue, 30 Jul 2002, Chromatest J. Pantsmaker wrote:
john bennett wrote:
sounds like the program you use hears a gap between the track arrangment you create and places a default gap of silence when encoding!
nope.. (afaik) from: http://users.belgacom.net/gc247244/livemix.htm
<quote> Once you get the hang of working with mp3's, there is a point where you want to want to burn a copy of an mp3-album to a normal music cd. All will be ok, as long as the album is no live or mixed recording.
In the latter case, no matter how hard you try, you will not succeed in making a seamless copy of the album on audio-cd. .... If you rip and encode in the conventional way there will always (as in 100%, for once on this site) be clicks and pauses between separate tracks on your burned cd. </quote>
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