
In Windows XP all you had to do was click on the file > right click > Properties > click on the. Google 'lossy audio compression' to learn more. How do you edit the details of a audio file such as a WAV. The MP3 format always loses some of the audio quality. I strongly recommend you do not use any file that was once an MP3 on a CD you want to release for sale. There are DDP checking programs that can verify the details are right. Reaper can output this type of file, but there is a lot of tedious detail work required, and one mistake can result in hundreds of copies of an unplayable CD. If, instead, you want to have a company (such as CD Baby) print a bunch of copies, Google for the DDP, which is a standard way to upload CD data to a CD printing company. You can probably find a free program for this with a Google search. There are a number of CD burning programs that allow entering CD-TEXT data and burn it to disk.

Rendering to 16 bit WAV will remove the MP3 tags.Īudio CDs do not support any metadata except for a poorly defined standard called CD-TEXT, where song titles pop up on (some) CD players.
