That's very helpful. Thanks for jogging my failing memory, smile.
From: audacity4blind-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
<audacity4blind-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> On Behalf Of stephen (Redacted sender
"sgsmg49" for DMARC)
Sent: Monday, October 14, 2019 7:15 PM
To: audacity4blind@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: [audacity4blind] Re: ripping cassettes
Hi Larry,
I can't help with the noise but you would split the tracks just like you did
with the albums you did a while ago. I think it was Part 4 of Andrew's
tutorial that covered this. Then you can rename the tracks with the context
menu and tag them as you export. Good luck.
Steve
From: audacity4blind-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
<mailto:audacity4blind-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
[mailto:audacity4blind-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of Larry Lumpkin
Sent: Monday, October 14, 2019 5:48 PM
To: audacity4blind@xxxxxxxxxxxxx <mailto:audacity4blind@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Subject: [audacity4blind] ripping cassettes
Hi everyone. I've taken on a project of ripping some home-made cassettes for
my sister-in-law. I am using a pretty inexpensive cassette converter which
looks like a Walkman with a usb port. It is manufactured by Inatuur, in case
anyone has used it. The transport is pretty good for this purpose but the
output contains a motor-boat sounding effect which I assume is something in
the motor. I sat the unit on a foam cushion which fixed the problem somewhat
but could use some suggestions on removing this noise as well as a little
distortion. My main purpose of this post is to ask if anyone has written a
comprehensive guide on how to break this single-track recording into tracks
and labeling the tracks. I am familiar with the tagger which I can run on
the way out of the project to convert to mp3. I have all of the 4 parts of
the tracks presentation from the magazine as well as a little tutorial on
labeling. I'm not sure that the labeling is quite what I want to do. I don't
have info on what the tracks are on the tapes meaning I don't know
performer, title, etc.
Thanks for any guidance you can offer.