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Ripping Your
CD's to MP3 Using AudioGrabber
This is a short tutorial on
using AudioGrabber to rip your songs onto your
computer. Please Note that AudioGrabber is not software
produced by SoftJock, Inc., and is copyrighted by Jackie
Franck, and that we at SoftJock, do NOT do support for
AudioGrabber - please see their website
here.
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AudioGrabber and Lame
Installation
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The first thing you need, is
a copy of AudioGrabber and the LAME MP3 encoder
installed on your computer. You will see the download
links to the right. We mirror the complete files on our
site to make it easier for you to download and install
them. These are free programs, but please observe the
license terms and copyrights of those involved.
First, save the AudioGrabber
install file, and run the file on your computer (agsetup.exe),
this will install AudioGrabber, usually to a folder
called C:\audiograbber. Then download the Lame
encoder, and unzip the files into the same folder
(technically, you only need the lame_enc.dll
file). |

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Now, we will setup AudioGrabber for use
with this tutorial. In it, we rip to WAV file first, mainly because
it is faster, but it also allows you to save a copy of the WAV files
to CD/DVD for later use, so you will not need to keep dragging out
your original CDs. After everything is installed as above, you
should see an AudioGrabber icon on your Window's Desktop, double
click that with your mouse, and off we go...
This is what the AudioGrabber main
screen should look like:

Click the settings button on top, and
you will be taken to the General Settings page:
Step 1: Ensuring that
AudioGrabber is setup properly.
AudioGrabber has many options available, here are
the ones of most concern to us.
Naming tab under General
Settings:
We have a folder called MP3 on our D
drive, and have created a subfolder under that called WAVIN. This is
where we will store the intermediate WAV files. You can name your
directory whatever you choose.
We have set the filename to be Track
name, followed by Artist name, which is simply a matter of
preference. Putting in any more than that is usually not necessary,
and also makes for very long filenames. We choose track name first,
because that is how we most often look for our tracks.
Sub Directories entries are all checked,
this will have the effect of putting all the ripped WAV files into
one folder to make it easier to encode later, and when encoding
happens, the songs will then be placed in subfolders under that with
Artist\Album as the organizational structure.

Silence Settings:
We set this up to remove most of the silence
before and after a song, less 1/2 second.

MP3 Settings:
Here we tell AudioGrabber to rip to WAV
file format. Appending the ID3 tag info, which it will use when it
does the encode to MP3 later.
We are setup to use the LAME encoder
when we actually do the encoding. We use a Constant Bitrate, as
almost all DJ software will decode these with no problems. We use
192 kbps bitrate, as this is the minimum you should use for DJ work,
although if you have plenty of disk space, you can use higher if you
like.
Quality is set to Stereo and High,
although you can use Joint Stereo as well, and in fact, it usually
goes that way anyway :)

Those are most of the settings we need to be
concerned with, although AudioGrabber has many more if you want to
play around with them.
Step 2: Ripping a CD
Put a CD into your drive, and you should see
something similar to the
following after a few seconds:

Click on the penguin, which will contact the
FreeDB database on the internet and look up the CD info, you should
then see something like this (our first disc is a compilation of
80's tunes):

You then click the GRAB button at the top, and
AudioGrabber will begin ripping the songs to your hard drive in the
initial WAV format. You will see a progress screen while this is
happening (it says MP3 at the bottom, but is ripping to WAV at this
point).

When completed, it will eject the disc (if you
have that option set), and you should see a screen like this:

At this point, we went ahead and ripped another
CD for demonstration purposes. If we look in Window's Explorer, our
folders and files should look something like this, as all the songs
should now reside in the WAVIN folder, in WAV format.

Step 3: Encoding to
MP3.
At this point, we are ready to proceed with the
encode to MP3. Your first try should have only ripped one or two
CDs, so you can test them after the encode, and make sure they are
going to be suitable for bitrate, naming conventions, etc. After you
become comfortable with the process, you will probably want to rip a
number of CDs before doing the encoding process. If you have a large
number of songs to encode, this will take some time, so I generally
start the encode before I go to bed, or when doing something else.
Click the File menu in AudioGrabber, choose Make
MP3, and you will see a file picker dialog box like this after you
browse to the folder you ripped to. We then highlight the first
song, scroll to the right all the way, and SHIFT-Left Click, which
will highlight all the songs in-between as well. Note: Because
of a limitation with filename sizes, how many files you can encode
at one time will vary. If you highlight say 500 songs, and the
program does nothing, you have exceeded that limit, try selecting
less files when you encode. There is no way to tell how many
exactly, as it depends on the size of your filenames and path, but
you will soon get a feel for how many you can encode as a general
rule.

Now, click the Open button, and the encoding
begins... You will see a progress dialog similar to this (as you can
see, it's the same as the earlier progress dialog):

When the encoding has completed, you will see
something like this in Window's Explorer. You will notice that
AudioGrabber has created subfolders under the WAVIN folder for
Artist name (in this case Various, since they were compilation
discs), and then Album name under artist.

You can now either delete the intermediate WAV
files in the WAVIN folder, or make copies onto CD or DVD before
deleting them(highly
recommended, as you can always re-encode them again later without
having to re-rip them from the original CD). WAV files take up quite
a bit of space, so unless you are going to be playing them instead
of MP3, you will want to remove them.
Unless you need to further process your files for
BPM or Album art, etc., you are now ready to import these files into
RockIt. Click the Add Tracks button in RockIt, check the Search
Subfolders button, then browse to the WAVIN folder (or whatever you
called yours), and all the MP3 song files will show up in the file
list, Select All and click Add.
So, that's about all there is to it. Check to
insure the quality of the bitrate is good enough for your needs, and
happy ripping :)
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