
Here is a quick run-down. Michael plays the music on his keyboard and records it onto a casette deck. For those of you who don't know what a cassette is, I direct you to the Wikipedia entry. Someone, usually Lynne, but on this occasion me, then runs a program on the computer to convert the track into a digital format. This then gets cut up, compressed and then tagged as separate mp3 files.
I am quite content to receive the files in this format as I usually transfer the rehearsal tracks to my phone's mp3 player so I can hear them on the way to work. But the majority of us receive the files as CDs, which means burning them as audio files onto a CD and making multiple copies, at least 16 for each section. The real irony is that once the mp3 is burned as a CD track the tagging data is completely stripped, and on top of that I am sure many people rerip their rehearsal CDs back into mp3s anyway. I know I do.
After just an afternoon of this, I kept thinking that there has got to be some better way of doing this. Thankfully, Michael's new laptop which I got to play with today should help, in the future, with reducing at least a few steps, and once he has Sibelius, things will be even quicker.
So, do appreciate your CDs, they really are labours of love.
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