Section 52. Create an Audio CD from a Playlist


52. Create an Audio CD from a Playlist

BEFORE YOU BEGIN

9 Import a Music CD into iTunes

20 Purchase Audio from the iTunes Music Store

34 Create a Playlist


SEE ALSO

53 Customize CD Burning Options

55 Print a CD Jewel Case Insert with Album Art


"Rip, Mix, Burn," exhorted Apple's ad when iTunes was released. The whole idea of digital music management is that you can take the music you already own, import it into your computer, organize it according to your own likes and dislikes, and then make your own "mix" CDs of your favorite music arranged just the way you want it.

52. Create an Audio CD from a Playlist


iTunes makes creating your own mix CDs nearly as simple as importing the music in the first place. Simply create a playlist containing the music you want to burn onto a CD; then insert a blank writable CD into the CD-ROM drive, and let iTunes do the rest. The tracks are burned to the CD in their native audio format ( CDDA ) in the order you specify. You can then play the CD in your car, on your portable stereo, at a dance , or wherever your fancy strikes.

KEY TERM

Compact Disc Digital Audio (CDDA) The standard specification for mastering compact discs, which includes a specific format for the uncompressed audio data in each track.


1.
Create a Suitable Playlist

The first step in creating a custom mix CD is to make a playlist containing the songs you want on the disc. As discussed in 34 Create a Playlist , navigate into the library and drag songs from it into the playlist, keeping in mind that typical CD-R discs can hold up to either 71 or 74 minutes of music. Don't make the playlist any longer than this! Use the statistics shown at the bottom of the iTunes' window to determine how many minutes your playlist will last. (Don't pay attention to the number of megabytes, or MB, that is reported for the playlist; the files become much larger when they're written in uncompressed CDDA format on the disc. The important thing for this task is the total time number.)

TIPS

iTunes can burn playlists that are longer than what will fit on a single CD, if you have multiple blank CDs to use. See step 5 for details.

Hold down Ctrl or while clicking a check box next to a song name to enable or disable all the check boxes in the current listing.

To skip burning certain songs in the playlist, disable the check boxes next to the names of those songs in the list.

2.
Click the Burn Disc Button

When you're viewing the playlist, the Browse button in the top-right corner of the iTunes' window becomes a Burn Disc button; click it to begin the creation of the new disc.

3.
Insert a Disc

In its display oval at the top of the window, iTunes prompts you to insert a blank disc and tells you the total burned capacity and playing time of the selected playlist (this can differ from the reported length of the playlist at the bottom of the iTunes' window if you disabled any of the songs' check boxes). If your computer has a CD tray, it is automatically ejected so that you can insert the blank disc. Otherwise, insert the disc into the drive slot until the drive pulls it in.

When the disc is inserted, iTunes recognizes the blank media and automatically changes the message in the display oval to a prompt telling you to click the Burn Disc button again (it is now throbbing gently) to begin burning the playlist to the disc.

If you don't click Burn Disc within about 10 seconds, iTunes cancels the operation and ejects the disc.

TIP

On the Mac, you can also insert the CD before you click the Burn Disc button the first time; if you do, Mac OS X prompts you whether it should prepare the disc for use as an audio CD (by switching to iTunes) or a data CD (by mounting it in the Finder). If you choose to open iTunes, iTunes can then burn a playlist immediately without prompting you to insert a disc.

4.
Burn the CD

Click the Burn Disc button the second time to begin the burn process. When the process is complete, the CD appears in the Source pane in the iTunes window to show the tracks you've just burned.

You can now eject the disc from your computer; its contents are written as standard uncompressed CDDA audio, which means that any CD player can play iteven old ones from the 80s.

5.
Burn a Long Playlist to Multiple CDs

When you insert the blank disc (as in step 3), iTunes checks its capacity and compares it to the length of the playlist you're trying to burn. If the playlist contains too much music to fit on the disc, iTunes asks whether you want to burn the entire playlist to multiple CDs, or to cancel the burn process so that you can trim the playlist down to fit on a single disc.

If you choose to burn the playlist to multiple discs, iTunes burns as many tracks as will fit onto the first disc, and then prompts you to insert another blank disc to continue. This process continues until all the tracks in the playlist have been burned onto discs. Be sure to label the discs appropriately so that you don't forget their sequence!

NOTE

iTunes will remember the track names of the burned discs if you insert them again into your computer; but other CD players don't have that ability. It's easy to lose track of what's on your mix CDs, especially if you burned a long playlist onto several discs. See 56 Print a CD Jewel Case Insert with Album Art for a way to ensure that these burned CDs don't become unlabeled mystery discs floating uselessly around the house.




iPod + iTunes for Windows and Mac in a Snap
iPod + iTunes for Windows and Mac in a Snap (2nd Edition)
ISBN: 0672328992
EAN: 2147483647
Year: 2005
Pages: 152
Authors: Brian Tiemann

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