One thing to remember is that, in order to prevent a little audible pop on the CD, the wave file has to be split very precisely. Gold Wave has an option that moves the markers that you set to the precise location to prevent these little pops.

Bruce

On Mon, 2 Mar 2009, Ray wrote:

Hi, first the .wav file has to be broken up into segmants to represent the
final track positions.  In Sound Forge this is done by using markers then
converting those to regions.  Finally the Extract regions dilogue is used to
extract and save the marked regions to separate files at a location you
choose.

These files can then be imported into something like XPburn, Nero, or NCH's
cd burner program.  In thes programs there is a burn at once setting which
writes the files gaplessly to the Cd.  (In Nero at last you have to reduce
all track time gaps to zero, (except for the first track) which is done in
the tracks properties in the track list you are compiling.  (Much simpler
with XPcdburn program and NCH's offering.)

Fear this explanation might pose as many quesitons as it attempts to answer,
but others might walk you through it.

Ray.


stever2525 wrote:
I have a recording as a .wav file on my hard drive and need to mark track
numbers at specific points to burn to CD. I want the CD to play seamlessly,
as if it were 1 track, like a live concert CD.
What software can accomplish this?
Thank you.



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