Curt Sampson wrote:

As far as I can tell, they do, although not sure how to check that
exactly...


Just listen, and watch the counter on the CD-player. It may help to
count beats and bars, otherwise you can just look for a significant
audio event very near the change-over point (to negative time or at
0:00). I suspect it would be, with any significant lead-ins, a good two
or three seconds out if it was wrong, so it ought not be too hard to
check.

yep, it's fine. On the CD I mentioned earlier in the thread, I specifically checked the transition between tracks 3 and 4, there are some guitar-tuning noises and some crowd interaction; it's in exactly the same place. Of course you'd have to take care to splice the tracks back together carefully (i.e. don't blindly concatenate wav files) but doing it properly is trivially scripted.



regarding cd-text, none of my cds had it in the first place, so I can't
say for sure.  :)


Hmm. That would be my bigger worry. I wonder if you just read the TOC
with cdrdao if you even get CD-Text in the generated TOC file, since
that information is actually in the subcode.

I guess I'll worry about it when I get a cd that has the feature... But why would flac-per-cd vs. flac-per-track affect this; it's all in the way cdrdao reads the toc file, right?


It would also be interesting to look at copy-protected CDs where the
subcode timing/track information is different from the TOC.

Again, if I ever come across one...

-Eric

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