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http://www.digitaltrends.com/home-theater/digitizing-your-record-collection/#!LJQDF
http://www.channld.com/purevinyl/
If you lean towards the audiophile camp and want everything to be preserved as a 16-bit/44.1kHz recording or even a 24-bit/192kHz FLAC high resolution audio track, programs like Pure Vinyl are going to rock your world.
The first advantage of the Twin Impact is that you’re taking the phono stage out of the equation and sending a digital signal to your computer after the analog signal from your turntable has been converted. You do need a few extra converters in this scenario which connect on one end to the RCA plugs from the table and terminate as Neutrik XLR connections for the front panel of the interface.
Channel D (the creators of Pure Music and Pure Vinyl) offer these converters for sale on their website and it’s an easy connection. Aside from the FireWire cable that you need to run to your computer, you can also connect the interface to your home stereo system with a 3.5 mm to RCA cable.
What is wrong with iTunes? I can’t hear anything.
Unfortunately, our friends over at Apple seem more interested in killing off vinyl than supporting it, so don’t expect to open iTunes and convert all of you records to MP3s or lossless formats with the click of the mouse. iTunes may be the final destination for many of you, but the real fun to be had is with products like Pure Vinyl, Audacity, and GarageBand.
Any of the programs listed above will help you record, edit, and convert your favorite records into the digital format that best suits your needs. If most of your music is stored on your smart phone or tablet and you prefer to walk around all day listening to music via a pair of headphones or stream it to a Bluetooth or AirPlay-enabled system, we recommend you save everything as an MP3 or AIFF file. That way, you’ll have more than enough room for hundreds of albums.
If you lean towards the audiophile camp and want everything to be preserved as a 16-bit/44.1kHz recording or even a 24-bit/192kHz FLAC high resolution audio track, programs like Pure Vinyl are going to rock your world.
At $280, Pure Vinyl is certainly an investment, but when you hear what it can do to records, even 78s, you may be really tempted to open your wallet. The program uses the standard RIAA curve as the default setting, but it also comes with 60 additional equalization curves for mono recordings, 45s, and 78s.
The process of recording an album is remarkably easy: The program can sense when the needle drops into the groove and even stop recording when the first side finishes. It will actually pause, and wait for you to flip to the other side before starting to record again. Slick.
Once you are done recording, you can either save the file as a .CAF and play it back through Pure Vinyl, or save each track individually to play it back via Pure Music (Channel D’s outstanding digital playback software which is included in the Pure Vinyl package) or as a Apple Lossless file at any bit/sample rate (up to 24/192) so that you can use other media players.
Read more: http://www.digitaltrends.com/home-theater/digitizing-your-record-collection/#ixzz31JRU3pjI
Follow us: @digitaltrends on Twitter | digitaltrendsftw on Facebook
http://www.digitaltrends.com/home-theater/digitizing-your-record-collection/#!LJQDF
http://www.channld.com/purevinyl/
If you lean towards the audiophile camp and want everything to be preserved as a 16-bit/44.1kHz recording or even a 24-bit/192kHz FLAC high resolution audio track, programs like Pure Vinyl are going to rock your world.
The first advantage of the Twin Impact is that you’re taking the phono stage out of the equation and sending a digital signal to your computer after the analog signal from your turntable has been converted. You do need a few extra converters in this scenario which connect on one end to the RCA plugs from the table and terminate as Neutrik XLR connections for the front panel of the interface.
Channel D (the creators of Pure Music and Pure Vinyl) offer these converters for sale on their website and it’s an easy connection. Aside from the FireWire cable that you need to run to your computer, you can also connect the interface to your home stereo system with a 3.5 mm to RCA cable.
What is wrong with iTunes? I can’t hear anything.
Unfortunately, our friends over at Apple seem more interested in killing off vinyl than supporting it, so don’t expect to open iTunes and convert all of you records to MP3s or lossless formats with the click of the mouse. iTunes may be the final destination for many of you, but the real fun to be had is with products like Pure Vinyl, Audacity, and GarageBand.
Any of the programs listed above will help you record, edit, and convert your favorite records into the digital format that best suits your needs. If most of your music is stored on your smart phone or tablet and you prefer to walk around all day listening to music via a pair of headphones or stream it to a Bluetooth or AirPlay-enabled system, we recommend you save everything as an MP3 or AIFF file. That way, you’ll have more than enough room for hundreds of albums.
If you lean towards the audiophile camp and want everything to be preserved as a 16-bit/44.1kHz recording or even a 24-bit/192kHz FLAC high resolution audio track, programs like Pure Vinyl are going to rock your world.
At $280, Pure Vinyl is certainly an investment, but when you hear what it can do to records, even 78s, you may be really tempted to open your wallet. The program uses the standard RIAA curve as the default setting, but it also comes with 60 additional equalization curves for mono recordings, 45s, and 78s.
The process of recording an album is remarkably easy: The program can sense when the needle drops into the groove and even stop recording when the first side finishes. It will actually pause, and wait for you to flip to the other side before starting to record again. Slick.
Once you are done recording, you can either save the file as a .CAF and play it back through Pure Vinyl, or save each track individually to play it back via Pure Music (Channel D’s outstanding digital playback software which is included in the Pure Vinyl package) or as a Apple Lossless file at any bit/sample rate (up to 24/192) so that you can use other media players.
Read more: http://www.digitaltrends.com/home-theater/digitizing-your-record-collection/#ixzz31JRU3pjI
Follow us: @digitaltrends on Twitter | digitaltrendsftw on Facebook