Vinyl and Cassette music to a hard drive - best way how to?

Vinyl and Cassette music to a hard drive - best way how to?

Author
Discussion

Jaguar steve

Original Poster:

9,232 posts

210 months

Wednesday 28th September 2016
quotequote all
Not much more to add to the title really. Source is a Linn LP12 and cassette deck into a Naim 32.5 and I know I can take a line level signal out from that via the tape out DIN socket.

I have about 200 albums and live recordings to store digitally and I don't want to risk storing and loosing them on my laptop if it dies and if possible would much rather have them on a dedicated hard drive feeding back into my Hi Fi preserving as much of the sound quality as possible.

What to consider? What do I need? How do you store music digitally, and is doing so a bomb and idiot proof robust method to preserve it? How is it all catalogued and stored and accessed once on the hard drive?

Bear in mind I don't even know how my iTunes account worked and had to get one of my kids to set that up for me and subsequently lost all my music when my last PC snuffed it because nothing was backed up I've obviously got a bit of catching up with technology to do... rolleyes

Over to you Chaps thumbup

megaphone

10,724 posts

251 months

Wednesday 28th September 2016
quotequote all
Audacity is good and free.

Jaguar steve

Original Poster:

9,232 posts

210 months

Wednesday 28th September 2016
quotequote all
megaphone said:
Audacity is good and free.
That's the download for a pc yes? So download that then connect the PC to the tape out on my pre amp and record away - get that too but where to keep music secure and maintain quality when done and how to playback through the Hi Fi?

davepoth

29,395 posts

199 months

Wednesday 28th September 2016
quotequote all
I think I'd just find the relevant album on youtube and rip it from there - much quicker.

otherman

2,191 posts

165 months

Wednesday 28th September 2016
quotequote all
Jaguar steve said:
That's the download for a pc yes? So download that then connect the PC to the tape out on my pre amp and record away - get that too but where to keep music secure and maintain quality when done and how to playback through the Hi Fi?
Yes, free download. You open it up, hit record, put the record on and wait til its done. I always save each track as a separate file. It's easy enough to see from the wave form where the track splits are, because of the quite section between. As far as security is concerned, once you've done all the work you won't want to lose it, so get an external hard drive and back it all up. PM if you want to know more...I used to do this professionally, so I know the ins and outs.

Jaguar steve

Original Poster:

9,232 posts

210 months

Thursday 29th September 2016
quotequote all
otherman said:
Jaguar steve said:
That's the download for a pc yes? So download that then connect the PC to the tape out on my pre amp and record away - get that too but where to keep music secure and maintain quality when done and how to playback through the Hi Fi?
Yes, free download. You open it up, hit record, put the record on and wait til its done. I always save each track as a separate file. It's easy enough to see from the wave form where the track splits are, because of the quite section between. As far as security is concerned, once you've done all the work you won't want to lose it, so get an external hard drive and back it all up. PM if you want to know more...I used to do this professionally, so I know the ins and outs.
That's a big help, thanks. smile

So I need a lead to connect my Hi Fi to my laptop, download Audacity, load albums onto that then transfer the whole lot to a hard drive.

Any particular hard drive and how much storage do I need for about 160 hours of music at the highest possible quality level?

megaphone

10,724 posts

251 months

Thursday 29th September 2016
quotequote all
Audacity records them as an .aup file, once you've finished recording and editing the files, you then need to convert them to a usable format to playback, usually .mp3. You can then name the tracks and add tags etc. Loads of online help for Audacity.

Store your .mp3 on a hard drive or USB stick or in iTunes or whatever you use.

otherman

2,191 posts

165 months

Thursday 29th September 2016
quotequote all
Audacity can save in all sorts of formats. I always save to .wav in the first place, then convert to your final format later. Wav is big, inefficient files, but they're very good quality, and faster to save in the first instance because there's so little coding of the raw file. I use CD-DA extractor to convert to mp3-VB0 in a batch run later. Read up on variable bitrate mp3s, there's great quality to be had there with effienct file sizes. Note you don't 'load' albums into audacity, you record them in real time.
I'd suggest in that format your 160 hrs would need around 20Gb. As wav about 100Gb. Nothing very much in terms of modern hard disk sizes.

bigandclever

13,787 posts

238 months

Thursday 29th September 2016
quotequote all
I was always say this ... get a Spotify account (other music providers are available), ripping your own is a colossal ball-ache smile

Murph7355

37,714 posts

256 months

Friday 30th September 2016
quotequote all
bigandclever said:
I was always say this ... get a Spotify account (other music providers are available), ripping your own is a colossal ball-ache smile
If you're OK renting stuff I guess it must work OK for some smile


briang9

3,279 posts

160 months

Friday 30th September 2016
quotequote all
davepoth said:
I think I'd just find the relevant album on youtube and rip it from there - much quicker.
yeah this works, and for stuff you have on tape from live recordings something like this perhaps?

http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/USB-Tape-to-PC-Cassette-...