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  1. #1
    Senior Member Country: UK
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    I've finally found an off-air recording of Derek New and Ron Goodwin's mighty Yorkshire Television March. It's in Real Player format, so at least I can play it on my computer, but is there any way of converting it to mp3?

  2. #2
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    I converted my copy of this via I-Tunes. You could try that. Lovely tune.

  3. #3
    Senior Member Country: Germany Wolfgang's Avatar
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    I use application called "Total Recorder". I got it 5 years ago to record some live streaming (it removes any sound gaps so that your recording is unbroken) and it only cost about £5. Nothing fancy - rather than convert raw files it records your sound card output as .wav file, which you can then convert to mp3 if you wish. This means that your recordings are only as good as your audio hardware and of course limited to what you can actually play. It does its job though and is perfectly good enough for converting radio to mp3.



    You can get trial version from download.com:



    Total Recorder Standard Edition - Reviews and free Total Recorder Standard Edition downloads at Download.com

  4. #4
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    name='Foster twelvetrees']I converted my copy of this via I-Tunes. You could try that. Lovely tune.


    Thanks Forster and Wolfgang.



    I use itunes quite a lot for downpoading podcasts. Are there some instructions available to show me what to do?

  5. #5
    Senior Member Country: England
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    If you're going the route Wolfgang suggests, you can do the same thing for free by downloading Audacity: Free Audio Editor and Recorder In the drop down 'source' menu just select 'wave' and press record....

  6. #6
    Senior Member Country: Great Britain
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    Easier still, try Freecorder Free Sound Recorder: Freecorder Toolbar which records the sound through your sound card and automatically converts it to MP3 format. While I am normally very wary of software that alters your toolbar, this is genuinely very useful, for Listen Again and any other such service. One click to record, with a small window to show you its recording, one click to stop and then asks you for a filename and location to save it to. Excellent, and as its name suggests, free!



    The link above explains all and shows you how it works with screenshots. No Mac version yet, sadly, but works well in Win XP. Sweep (with the excellent Windows Defender) for adware and spyware after you've loaded it, just in case.



    rgds

    Rob

  7. #7
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    These are nice little programmes. They're programmes that capture any sound coming through your sound card, regardless of the source. Some software records as wavs, some give you the option of MP3. If it needs any sort of cleaning up I suggest you capture it in wav format and then use your own preferred codec or MP3 maker to do the conversion to MP3. It's also easier to trim, fade or otherwise edit the wav in an audio editor first, rather than go through a double conversion from MP3 to wav and then back again (potentially losing quality at each step). Careful as you record - remember you're capturing every sound that's coming out of the sound card - including keyboard noises and things like e-mail alerts. Best to shut everything else down and then leave it alone to run through without working on other things at the same time.

  8. #8
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    Thanks everybody for all the advice. I'm much more confident in carrying on now. I'm going to contact Chandos to suggest they rerecord it as part of their British Light Music series, as they have with other ITV startup themes.

  9. #9
    Senior Member Country: UK
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    Wow, thanks guys, been looking for something like this for ages. Longing to try it out on listen again programs.



    This site gets better everyday.



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  10. #10
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    name='lordtednfs']Wow, thanks guys, been looking for something like this for ages. Longing to try it out on listen again programs.



    This site gets better everyday.



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    They're excellent for capturing Internet Radio shows because it makes no difference which format they've been broadcast in .. Real Audio, Windows etc. No need to worry about trying to download the sound file for conversion either - just snag it as comes out of your sound card. As well as turning off your other noisy software, turn off your PC microphone too or it'll also pick up incoming room noises.

  11. #11
    Senior Member Country: Ireland Edward G's Avatar
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    Rob,

    I read your post with great interest. BBC Radio 2 have a selection of great music documentaries (still available in the "listen again" facility) which I have been trying to capture externally using an MP3 in-line recorder linked to the PC's headphones socket.







    http://www.bbc.co.uk/radio2/musicclub/documentaries




    We don't have broadband where I live and the broadband connection I have used at work is wobbly. It doesn't hold the signal and quality varies badly. Is there any source where I can download these as MP3 or WAV files? I would love to colect these before they are gone...



    Your urgent assistance is greatly appreciated.



    Best Regards,



    Edward G.







    name='Rob Compton']Easier still, try Freecorder Free Sound Recorder: Freecorder Toolbar which records the sound through your sound card and automatically converts it to MP3 format. While I am normally very wary of software that alters your toolbar, this is genuinely very useful, for Listen Again and any other such service. One click to record, with a small window to show you its recording, one click to stop and then asks you for a filename and location to save it to. Excellent, and as its name suggests, free!



    The link above explains all and shows you how it works with screenshots. No Mac version yet, sadly, but works well in Win XP. Sweep (with the excellent Windows Defender) for adware and spyware after you've loaded it, just in case.



    rgds

    Rob

  12. #12
    Senior Member Country: Great Britain
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    Hi Edward G -



    I don't know of a solution to this - in some ways, that's the one drawback to Freecorder, which is otherwise brilliant. It would be great to use it to download the file behind Listen Again as an MP3 or whatever, but it can't do that, you need to record it in real time. But thats really just me being lazy, especially as the programmes are there for nearly a week before they disappear.



    Does anyone else know of an answer to Edward's question? That is assuming I've understood...



    What about Orbit? Orbit Rich Media Downloader:download social video,music, streaming media, rtmp and more...Pandora,YouTube,Yahoo,Myspace,Dailymotion,R apidShare... I have tried to use it on Listen Again but unsuccessfully - then again (as is patently obvious) I am rather at the limits of my techy knowledge!



    Anyone?



    rgds

    Rob

  13. #13
    Senior Member Country: Ireland Edward G's Avatar
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    Cheers Rob,

    Thanks for your rapid reply and advice on this.

    I think the only solution is to find a better broadband connection.

    At least when I find a nearby and stable broadband source freecorder will simplify the (internal) recording of the streaming audio.

    If anyone else knows a sneaky way around this or an alternative source for these docs please post it as a reply here!

    Thanks all,

    Edward G.

  14. #14
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    name='Edward G']



    If anyone else knows a sneaky way around this or an alternative source for these docs please post it as a reply here!

    Thanks all,

    Edward G.


    Hi Edward, long time no hear. Have you tried using nero as it will encode the audio for you to mp3 and then burn it to your disc? All you need to do is to select the all files menu at the bottom of nero once you have pasted your file and it should do the rest for you.



    Failing that try burning the file to a cdrw/dvdrw in it's original format using windows media player 11. When you have done that you should be able to rip it to the mp3 format using windows media player. I tried it tonight before posting this for you and I am glad to say it works. Let me know how you get on and if you need help on how to do just send me a pm.



    Best wishes



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  15. #15
    Senior Member Country: Great Britain
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    Hi Lord Ted



    If you have done this from the BBC's "listen again", then I for one would be really grateful if you could explain how - in words of one syllable if poss!



    Many thanks

    Rob

  16. #16
    Senior Member Country: Ireland Edward G's Avatar
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    Greetings Lord Ted,

    Great to hear from you. Many thanks for your mail. Did you manage to watch the Ireland v France game yesterday in your island paradise?

    The boys gave a great showing.

    About my audio snag. The problem with the "Listen again" BBC docs is that you cannot just download the file as an MP3 etc.

    You have to listen it play again in real time (like "streaming audio") and somehow harness it. I can record it to my MP3 player and edit from there.

    I am now more or less sorted as I have found a stable broadband signal. Hope I can catch the ones I like before they are removed..!

    Thanks again and best Regards,

    Edward G.

  17. #17
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    name='Rob Compton']Hi Lord Ted



    If you have done this from the BBC's "listen again", then I for one would be really grateful if you could explain how - in words of one syllable if poss!



    Many thanks

    Rob


    Hi Rob,

    I honestly thought that it was broadcasted in mp3 as I recently recorded 4 shows from the listen again service and have found that I have used less than 100mb, that's 1/7th of the disc space. So at that rate I should be able to get 28 shows on one disc. I use Freecorder to record the shows and recommend it very highly for the listen again service. If you have not got version 11 of windows media player you can get it at the microsoft website.



    But to answer your question on how to convert to mp3 using windows media player, this is what you do:



    Using a cdrw or dvdrw disc, select the file you wish to transfer. Right click on the file and a menu will appear. Look down the menu and you will see SEND TO. Bring the cursor "pointer" down to there and another menu will open and you should see a small cd disc where you have put your cdrw/dvdrw disc. CLICK that and you should see on your tool bar a message saying "You now have files waiting to be written to your disc", click on the icon at the bottom of the message.



    A new page will open now and will see where your file has been transfered to. Look at the top left handside of this page and you will see the word FILE, click on that and another menu will open. Click on WRITE THESE FILES TO CD. This will open the CD Writing Wizard. Select next and then select "MAKE AN AUDIO CD" and then select NEXT. You have now started to burn your audio file to your disc.



    Upon completion the disc should automatically eject itself and then you move onto the last stage.



    Push the ejected back and the media player will reopen showing you that you have a disc inserted. Look on the tool bar at the top of the page and you will see RIP, select this.



    The media player will open onto a new page and at the bottom of the page in the right hand corner you will see START RIP, select this. The media player will now start to transfer your file to mp3 format.



    You can even transfer all your cd's to mp3 format using the media player just by following the last stage. The media player will inspect your disc and then rip it to mp3 format and then store it in your library for you. You can then select which songs you want to burn to a disc by selecting the BURN menu and then selecting the songs you want by clicking on the title and then dragging/pulling the title to the burn list on the right side of the page. Try it with cdrw/dvdrw as you can erase these if you make a mistake.



    Have fun



    Best wishes



    Eddie



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  18. #18
    Senior Member Country: UK
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    Hi Edward,

    I was unable to watch the boys play over the weekend as it was not shown here like so so many great sporting events, they did not even show the Olympics last time it was on, hopefully with it being on in China later this year we might get a smattering of some events.



    It's really nice here in my piece of Shangri-la but I miss so many sporting events and decent tv up until a few weeks ago, when a very caring member mentioned something about UkNova where you can download some great tv shows and sporting events. So now I am much happier.



    Hope you get your audio and broadband problems sorted soon and Happy St Patricks Day in advance.



    Best wishes



    Eddie



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  19. #19
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    name='lordtednfs']Hi Rob,

    I honestly thought that it was broadcasted in mp3 as I recently recorded 4 shows from the listen again service and have found that I have used less than 100mb, that's 1/7th of the disc space. So at that rate I should be able to get 28 shows on one disc. I use Freecorder to record the shows and recommend it very highly for the listen again service. If you have not got version 11 of windows media player you can get it at the microsoft website.



    But to answer your question on how to convert to mp3 using windows media player, this is what you do:



    Using a cdrw or dvdrw disc, select the file you wish to transfer. Right click on the file and a menu will appear. Look down the menu and you will see SEND TO. Bring the cursor "pointer" down to there and another menu will open and you should see a small cd disc where you have put your cdrw/dvdrw disc. CLICK that and you should see on your tool bar a message saying "You now have files waiting to be written to your disc", click on the icon at the bottom of the message.



    A new page will open now and will see where your file has been transfered to. Look at the top left handside of this page and you will see the word FILE, click on that and another menu will open. Click on WRITE THESE FILES TO CD. This will open the CD Writing Wizard. Select next and then select "MAKE AN AUDIO CD" and then select NEXT. You have now started to burn your audio file to your disc.



    Upon completion the disc should automatically eject itself and then you move onto the last stage.



    Push the ejected back and the media player will reopen showing you that you have a disc inserted. Look on the tool bar at the top of the page and you will see RIP, select this.



    The media player will open onto a new page and at the bottom of the page in the right hand corner you will see START RIP, select this. The media player will now start to transfer your file to mp3 format.



    You can even transfer all your cd's to mp3 format using the media player just by following the last stage. The media player will inspect your disc and then rip it to mp3 format and then store it in your library for you. You can then select which songs you want to burn to a disc by selecting the BURN menu and then selecting the songs you want by clicking on the title and then dragging/pulling the title to the burn list on the right side of the page. Try it with cdrw/dvdrw as you can erase these if you make a mistake.



    Have fun



    Best wishes



    Eddie



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    Thanks My Lord!

  20. #20
    Senior Member Country: UK
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    Buy me a pint when I next come home, hehe. Pleasure to help.



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