Fall 1999

MP3: The Basics

While the music industry worries about how to make songs available on the Web without losing money, and some artists are turning to online music as a new channel to their fans, many computer users are left wondering where to find music online and what to do when they find it. Here are some tips on music in the popular MP3 format, one of many formats that can be used for storing music digitally.

Finding MP3 Audio

Though sometimes elusive, MP3 audio is widely available on the Net. MP3.com offers more than 10,000 pop, alternative, country, hip-hop and spoken-word tracks, mainly by lesser-known artists, though major stars like Tori Amos and Alanis Morissette will be offering live performances through the site. It also features instructions under the MP3 for Beginners banner. You can scour the Web, looking for an artist or song title, through MP3 search sites like www.2look4.com. Because of potential copyright violations, Top 40 tracks might prove difficult--or impossible--to find.

Sites offering titles illegally often require surfers to download directly from a server with a special password. As the Recording Industry Association of America pursues more bootleg sites, these pirate tracks are becoming increasingly elusive.

Playing MP3 Audio

COMPUTER-BASED PLAYERS: To decode MP3 files, you need special software (a comprehensive list is available at www.mp3.com/software). MP3 players are widely available free (or for a small shareware fee) for downloading. For Windows, Winamp (www.winamp.com) and Musicmatch (www.musicmatch.com) are popular; Macintosh users can try Macamp (www.macamp.com). The new Real Player Plus G2 from Real Networks (www.real.com) supports MP3, as well as streaming Real Audio and Video.

PORTABLE PLAYERS: The so-called killer app for MP3 is special hardware that allows listeners to enjoy the music away from the computer. Priced at less than $200, the palm-size Diamond Rio has become the Walkman of MP3, playing about an hour's worth of music (www.diamondmm.com). Alternatives include the MPMan (www.eigerlabs.com/mpman/) and the Nomad from Creative Labs (www.nomadworld.com/products/welcome.html). Players designed specifically for use in cars, like the Empeg Player (www.empeg.com), are beginning to hit the market as well.

Making MP3 Files

Programs like Musicmatch for Windows and Audiocatalyst (www.xingtech.com/mp3/audiocatalyst) allow you to digitally extract and write audio tracks from compact disks to your hard drive, a process sometimes called ripping. With Musicmatch, for example, you simply insert a CD into your CD-ROM drive and click on Record on the Musicmatch player; a selected track will then be converted into MP3 within a few minutes. To record the MP3 track onto a CD, it must be first converted to a WAV file (using an encoder like Winamp), then 'burned' onto a disk using a CD recorder device.

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Comments:

I am predominantly a keyboard player and I arrange most of my music on a Windows(95)-based computer. I have run a few tests (from both .WAV and CD) with the Musicmatch Jukebox freeware, and although it's far from flawless and fairly slow to boot, it does nicely for the time being. I was primarily looking for an inexpensive way to make my songs accessible to the general public via the web and this software is as inexpensive as it gets! (There is apparently an upgrade for $29.95 that I would *HOPE* is both faster and cleaner but I'm going to experiment with the freeware version and read more reviews before I take that plunge. I will be sure and let you know how it fares, if you'd like me to.) If others are interested, they can download the freeware from http://www.musicmatch.com/

Mike Mattone <mattone@pop.uky.edu>

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