yungboss
ILLIEN
ill o.g.
Battle Points: 1
The title is self explanatory. When you buy a music CD from the store, the files on it are labeled as .CDA format. After research, I learned .CDA isnt actually a format, but rather just a label the computer recognizes each track on the disc as. This would mean that the files aren't MP3s since it would be labeled as such and it cant be WAV since WAV files are too large. So ultimately, how do "professional" artists get their music onto CD without mixing them down into a format?
Mixing down a session to a MP3 file destroys some of the quality so figuring out a way to burn audio onto a disc without a format can ultimately preserve the sound quality.
Mixing down a session to a MP3 file destroys some of the quality so figuring out a way to burn audio onto a disc without a format can ultimately preserve the sound quality.