28.12.11
21.12.11
14.12.11
7.12.11
30.11.11
Belle, the aboriginal cast(Garou, Daniel, Patric)
23.11.11
Neon Genesis Evangelion - "Thanatos" (Eminence Symphony Orchestra)
16.11.11
Home - Edward Sharpe and The Magnetic Zeros Acoustic Cover (Jorge & Alexa Narvaez)
9.11.11
HALLELUJAH , (shrek song)
26.10.11
James Getting Away With It All (All Messed Up) Album Version
19.10.11
The Easybeats - Friday On My Mind
12.10.11
Taio Cruz - Dynamite (Int'l Version)
5.10.11
Blur - Song 2 (Wob Wob Dubstep Remix)
28.9.11
TID Pro - Designed For DJs - Trackitdown.net
21.9.11
Tinie Tempah - Written In The Stars ft. Eric Turner
14.9.11
Wishery (Disney Remix)
7.9.11
Heroes of Earth KL Concert - JJ & Leehom Duet + Interaction
31.8.11
合唱『Just Be Friends』- Nico Nico Chorus
24.8.11
Mumford & Sons - The Cave
17.8.11
Waiting for the End (Official HD)
10.8.11
Caro Emerald - A Night Like This - Official video
3.8.11
"Behind Blue Eyes ": Limp Bizkit, featuring Halle Berry
27.7.11
Taylor Swift - Love Story
13.7.11
Evanescence - Everybody's Fool (Video)
6.7.11
29.6.11
KIRBY KRACKLE "On and On" Official Music Video/Fan Film
22.6.11
PIPPIN (Broadway Musical) Sam Harris Song and Dance Rehearsal
15.6.11
Zombie Love Song - (Your Favorite Martian music video)
8.6.11
1.6.11
Taher Shabab - New Song ( Kaliwaal & Mast! ) + mp3
25.5.11
Inna - Sun Is Up
18.5.11
Fall Out Boy - I Don't Care
11.5.11
Wretch 32 ft. Example - Unorthodox (Official Video) (Out NOW!!!)
4.5.11
Dethklok - Murmaider II:The Water God
27.4.11
Written In The Stars - Lyrics
20.4.11
How to Fix Mp3 iTunes Tags
If you're looking for information on how to fix mp3 iTunes tags, you're about to find out in this short article. Lots of people have had problems importing their iTunes tags and can cause duplicates, confusion, and a mess of other problems for you.
The most common reason that this happens is when people import music from CD's or other media sources. iTunes will label and tag things on what it thinks is accurate, and, as you know machines, this isn't always accurate.
So how do you fix the tags and make them accurate?
There are 2 main methods that you can use to fix them.
1. You can manually go through, right-click the songs, and set the tags yourself. This would mean setting the artist, titles, genre, etc. It can be pretty tedious, but the main point here is that you can get it done quickly. If you have tons of songs it can be somewhat of a mission, though.
2. The second method to fix mp3 iTunes tags is to use an application that can do it for you. You basically will go through and set parameters that will automatically set the tags to whatever you chose. The songs will then be updated based on what you inputted.
These are the two main methods to fix mp3 iTunes tags.
More specifically, you right-click the songs:
Then, a menu should come up.
Then click "Get Info."
On this menu you should be able to fix everything and input whatever you want. That's it!
Another key problem that we can deal with is duplicate songs. If you have a set of songs that are already in your iTunes library, you can find that iTunes will make duplicates since it doesn't know that the songs already exist. This is primarily because the tags don't match and iTunes thinks that it's an entire new song.
Using a tag application can help with this too, as it will automatically fix the things for you. However, sometimes you need to be a bit more careful when using something like that, as deleting the wrong songs can leave you without any!
All in all iTunes is a great application, but there are some of the drawbacks like we've mentioned here.
Some reasons why this happens:
iTunes saves songs in a different format than normal. They save it in a very unique way, especially taking into account all the information that is stored in the songs (Such as Artist, Song, Genre, etc.) So as it comes from an MP3 or any other kind of file, it brings it in, edits it, and saves it in its own iTunes method. While this process is taking place a lot of the valid information is lost.
6.4.11
Kalicharan
30.3.11
Where Can I Find Karaoke MP3s?
There is no such thing as a truly free, karaoke MP3. While sites like Ez-tracks offer "101 free legal karaoke songs," the price you pay makes you subject to advertisement after advertisement. They pop up on the page, they invade your email inbox, they interrupt your song searches. For some it is well worth it, but others just want an easier system. One would think that the iTunes store would be full of karaoke tunes, although the offerings are still unimpressive for the seasoned veteran and many tracks don't have lyrics automatically included. Despite these setbacks, there are a number of places to look for online karaoke music.
There are several things to look for when downloading karaoke MP3 files. Some files feature recordings from the original band members, with the vocals removed. Others have professional recording artists performing the tracks, with the vocals removed. Other tracks come with the vocals and allow you to cancel out the vocals on your karaoke system, if your system comes with that feature. It is important to understand the features and the limitations of your karaoke equipment before you start browsing for music.
Another factor to consider is its extension. Most downloads will come as ".mp3" files, although some may say "midi,""mp3+g" or "mp4." Midi sometimes sounds like keyboard music and is often a very different version, so you will want to avoid those. The MP3+G are good because they have the lyrics included that can be output to video. MP4 format may be a music file and an accompanying music video file, which is fine if you want the videos more than the lyrics.
It is a natural assumption that where there is the internet, there is free everything. Unfortunately, the market selling karaoke downloads is still pretty hot and you are not likely to find any sites offering free karaoke MP3 files. You may be able to find some downloads on peer-to-peer applications like LimeWire or BearShare; however, these sites are growing increasingly more unreliable and havens for computer viruses.
Newsgroups like Usenet-Replayer may have online karaoke files for download, although these sites are fairly limited in their offerings. IRC file sharing channels like Searchirc or Ircnetsplit are popular ways of getting downloads because of the vast amount of accessible content, although it is technically illegal to share content this way, it may leave your computer vulnerable to hackers and it isn't user friendly.
There are a number of sites offering legal karaoke MP3 files for purchase. At Singme, you can download karaoke MP3s for 88 cents and video karaoke for $1.50. They specialize in children's music, nursery rhymes, gospel and holiday music. At Amazon, you can download 73,219 karaoke MP3s for 89 to 99 cents each. Other sites with large selections are Karaoke, Karaoke-version and Ez-tracks. With a monthly subscription to Napster for $12.95/month, you can download unlimited karaoke music files to be played on your computer or your iRiver.
16.3.11
Phantogram - Mouthful Of Diamonds
9.3.11
2.3.11
Jai Mata Di - Ya Devi Sarva Bhuteshu - Maa Durga Mantra
23.2.11
16.2.11
Jeff Dunham Achmed's "Jingle Bombs"
9.2.11
How to Make Free Ringtones for LG Rumor
2.2.11
Welcome to Heartbreak Feat. Kid Cudi By Kanye West (Album Edition)
26.1.11
Recording Vinyl to CD - Getting it Right First Time
Many people have set about using their computers to record their album and single collections and save them as digital files to put on audio CDs or Mp3 players. Its can be very time consuming work that you really want to get right first time, so what are pitfalls, and what tricks are there to make the job better or quicker?
When I first started recording my record collection I made the mistake of recording lots of singles before listening them through. I was driving along listening to my newly transferred collection and gradually realising that every track had faults and was going to need doing again. So the first piece of advice is this - record a few tracks to start with, and listen them right through before going any further. You really need to make sure your method is reliable and gives a quality product before spending the time working your way through a big collection.
Recording Volume
You'll want to be sure your recordings aren't too quiet, but don't be tempting to whack up the record volume to avoid this. There's a fine line between a full recording and an over-recording with clipped peaks. To start with, do a short trial recording with each record you do, edging the recording volume up and down till its just right. After a while you'll find out where the setting should be with your hardware. 12 inch singles tend to be louder at source than LPs so watch out for that - and sometimes those critters play at 45rpm one side and 33rpm the other, so that's another thing to watch for.
Time saving methods
One question is whether you have to record in real time, and the answer appears to be a very obvious yes, but that doesn't have to be true. You can record a 33rpm album at 45 rpm, then use software to stretch the recording back to its original time. I've tried this method and as far as I can tell there's no loss in quality, but it kind of strikes a wrong chord with me and I don't use this method in practice. What I tend to do is record in the background while I do something else, or just do something else entirely like eat a meal or go for a run.
I do recommend that after you complete a recording, save it initially as a raw data file (such as.wav) because the save will be much quicker that converting to mp3 on the fly. This way you also save best quality, and you can make compressed format versions later using a batch conversion utility (there's a good one in Easy CD-DA Extractor from poikosoft). This is another thing you can run while you go and do something more useful. Wav files are bigger and at one time this would have been an issue, but now that terabyte drives are very affordable there's no need to skimp on this one.
Track splitting
When you've recorded your LP you're left with two files, one for each side and these need splitting into individual tracks. There a several pieces of software that claim they can do this automatically and it looks like a great time saving opportunity. But for me, quality is king and none of these tools work very reliably, and you'll end up with some tracks splitting at quiet sections, or failing to split on short gaps between tracks on some albums. In the end you'll spend longer fixing them later than you can ever save in the first place. The best way to split tracks is manually, particularly if its your music because you'll know for sure where you want tracks to start and finish.
The best professional recording tool is Adobe Audition (or better still if you can find a copy of syntrillium cooledit 200) but its quite expensive, so the budget conscious can work very well with wavepad which even has a free license version.
Removing crackles
Most people will want to remove the crackles from the finished recording, although I know some people leave them on to keep that vinyl authenticity. For me though, it defeats the object of getting a digital copy.
Crackles can be edited off manually, but that would be very time consuming and there are several very functional tools out there to do it for you. My own favourite is DePopper from Droid Software, because it has a batch run facility, so you can stock it up with 20 albums to clean up while you go and watch the Sopranos. I'm sure you've all spotted the trend in this article, if you want to save time, batch utilities are your friend.
© Colne Brooks 2010
18.1.11
MP3 Duplicate Finder - How to Automatically Remove Duplicate MP3 Files From iTunes
If you don't have a good mp3 duplicate finder then chances are you are wasting valuable space on your hard drive. Since the music downloading boom Napster created yearsago duplicate mp3 files have become a real problem. If you know much about computers then you'll know that hard drives are the bottleneck of computer speed. If you have unnecessary music taking up space your computer performance will suffer because of it.
iTunes does have a built in mp3 duplicate finder, but it is primitive to say the least. For iTunes to locate your duplicates they have to be spelled exactly the same. And for most of us, our libraries are so unorganized and mismanaged that correct spelling is rare. But that is where an automatic duplicate mp3 finder comes into play!
There is software available that can scan your music files/folders and identify duplicate mp3 files for you. The best part being it is totally hands free, after you click the start button that is. Misspelled songs are no match for this application either. It does not determine the song based on the ID3 tag info, it actually takes an acoustic fingerprint and compares it with the songs in its enormous online database. It then gives you the option to delete the duplicate mp3s or mark them in iTunes so you can do it yourself; if you're worried about deleting something you need or want.
Along with being able to find and remove duplicate mp3s this some programs can also:
Fix misspelled songs
Complete missing or incorrect ID3 tags
Find album artwork
Organize genres
And more... If you want to organize iTunes, delete duplicate mp3 files, and save hard drive space while improving your computers performance, get an Mp3 duplicate finder asap.