Helpfile
MP3+Cue with Foobar2000: replay, track splitting, CD burning

Cue sheets - introduction

Q SheetThe cue sheet, downloadable from the bottom almost all our music recordings pages, is a short text file which indicates titles and timings of tracks, and references the MP3 file which it describes. To download a cue sheet, simply right click the "Q-Sheets" button (right) and select Save file as... or Save target as...

Software such as Foobar2000 for Windows PC reads this text file, searches for the MP3 file named in it, and displays the tracks as if they were separate. It can split them for you, play them back for you, or burn them to CD* for you.

Important: Before starting, please make sure you've not renamed the .mp3 file and that it's saved in exactly the same directory or folder as the .cue file. The actual location is irrelevant as long as the cue sheet can "find" the mp3.

Note that if you've saved the MP3 into a folder called My Music, there's nothing specific about the folder that prevents you from saving non-music files into it, and there's nothing to prevent you saving music files elsewhere. It's merely a name given to a folder which Windows recognises as normally containing your music.

 

 

InfoUsing Foobar2000 with MP3+Cue

Contents:

*These require additional software - see below.

 



1. PLAYBACK OF LONG MP3 FILES

With Foobar2000 select File/Open... and select and open the Cue file. You should now see the recording open with all tracks listed, ready for playback:

Foobar playback





2. SPLIT LONG MP3 FILES.

Right click on the overall title and select "Convert" - a sub-menu pops up. Select Convert to... from the sub-menu, which allows you to split the recording into individual tracks on your hard drive. I'd recommend choosing WAV files from the options list you're presented with, as it looks like the program will re-encode MP3s, which potentially downgrades the audio.

Splitting files with Foobar

If you's rather split the long MP3 into individual short MP3 files, then you'll need CueSplitter, which can be downloaded from http://www.medieval.it - again, open the Cue file (not the MP3), then click on the Split button, indicate where you'd like the individual files, and you're away.

 

 

3. MAKE A CD*

Right click on the overall title and select "Convert" - a sub-menu pops up which offers Write to CD...which allows you to create a track-split CD from the MP3.

CD writing

*Note: You need to install an extra module to enable CD writing from Foobar, which also requires that you have Ahead's Nero Burning ROM software on your PC.

Select CD Burning Support at http://www.foobar2000.org/components/index.html for the extra module. Nero can be found at http://www.nero.com and also supports direct burning to CD using Cue sheets.

 

InfoFor an in-depth look at using Nero with cue sheets click here

 

 

4. MAKE A COMPILATION CD FROM MORE THAN ONE MP3 FILE*

*Requires additional software - see above

1. Create a New Playlist (File/New Playlist)

2. Using File/Add Files... open the cue sheets in the order you'd prefer to hear them:

Adding files

3. Right click on the Playlist tab and follow the context menus through Contents and Convert to Write Audio CD:

CD writing

4. The program should detect your CD writer - insert a CD and click Burn to make the CD with appropriate track points and both MP3s together.


The only shortcoming with this approach is the inability to set a gap between the two recordings - you need a dummy MP3 that's perhaps ten seconds long to do this, and load it into the playlist between the cue sheet sections. A suitable file can be downloaded here.

 

 

 

 

Pristine Classical - DRM-free historic FLACs and MP3s since 2005

 

FLAC or MP3?
Mendelssohn Violin Conc.
Heifetz, NYPO, Cantelli '54

Mendelssohn Violin Concerto - Heifetz
Click cover for more info

Check out the difference between MP3 and FLAC with a free download of the first movement of this historic recording:

Download MP3 FLAC download


XR: all FLAC

All our XR-remastered recordings are available in both MP3 and FLAC format

Horowitz plays Tchaikovsky

Toscanini's Barber

Trio di Trieste - Brahms Piano Trio No 3

Miles in Paris, 1949

Boulanger's French Renaissance Music

Mississippi John Hurt - the 1928 sessions complete

 

XR