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Most analog to digital converter chips are pretty decent these days, although the implementations sometimes fail, particularly on the analog side.
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I use it for music editing so I hope it is decent. Well, my MOTU box sounds pretty good, even though it is 10 years old and has been recapped once already. Also don't forget, I bought many of these records used, they are decades old, and many people weren't particularly careful how they handled them before I got them. I don't overdue restoration, but some degree of it makes, at least for me, a more pleasant listening experience. Now, they have their reasons, sometimes philosophical, sometimes just carelessness, but I like my music without pops and clicks from scratches. Also, many of the transfers out there, including the Smithsonian ones of the Cook collection, were direct transfers from disc without any restoration. I regularly get requests to transfer old items to digital for researchers in this genre.
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Most of the record companies are defunct, the ownership of the master recordings is unknown, the rights issue is sometimes contentious. Only a minuscule amount has ever been re-released on CD. But most of my collection is older vinyl (and shellac) of older Calypso and steelband, some African. If a decent CD copy of my analog records is available at a reasonable price I'll buy it, as I do recognize the value of my time, and yes transferring is time consuming. With the exception of electronic instruments which are natively digital, all music has to be converted from analog to digital at some point. I suspect my analog to digital conversion is pretty much equal to that of the record company who converts the analog master to generate a digital master for the CD. Mville, I don't throw out the vinyl after converting, but I prefer the convenience of having it on my server, and I listen a lot while driving. Yes, it is time consuming work, but if you are like me, you'll listen to the record a lot more once it is digitized, and you can put it on a smart phone to listen to in your car through bluetooth, or with headphones.
#USB TURNTABLE SOFTWARE#
You can either do that by right-clicking on the file (or a bunch of them in a directory), or by using metadata editing software like mp3tag. Then enter the metadata (title, artist, album title, etc). Otherwise use the dBPoweramp music converter to get the files in the format you want. If your audio editing software allows you to save in the desired format (FLAC, mp3, m4a, etc. You'll have to record the audio as a file, split the file into tracks, trim the beginning and end of each track, possibly use declicking and other plug-ins to remove scratch clicks, possibly adjust the levels (although you can do that from within dBPoweramp later.) Then save the files. But I suspect most editing software allows the selection of the USB audio input when it is plugged in.