yes..he does
Shocking Blue
is it the Tom Jones(?) song you are describing? Lots of backup horns and so on? is it the Tom Jones(?) song you are describing? Lots of backup horns and so on? is it the Tom Jones(?) song you are describing? Lots of backup horns and so on? "Vehicle" by Bo Bice "I'm the friendly stranger in the black sedan, won't you hop inside my car?"
Yes, kasey Casem spoke of it
Open iTunes. Right-click on the song you want to shorten. Click "Get Info." Then click "Options." There, it'll show "Start Time" and "Stop Time." Adjust the time you want it to start the song and stop it. There are innumerable other ways of editing or manipulating a song to make it shorter too. If you know exactly what you want to cut out then audio production software such as Cubase and Pro Tools will let you do this. There are cheaper alternatives to those programs too such as Goldwave and Reaper. If you have apple you can use garage band program and edit.
There are several software that create or use alb extension so depends on which one you have: 1) image commander album = used by paint shop pro 2) cubase = a music production program, a backup song file 3) alpha five data dictionary = contains data for the database 4) chief archetect library file = residential achitectural software, contains a library of drawing elements 5) alphacam laser VB file = CAD/CAM software 6) photo soap Since alb is abbreviation for album i would suspect there are more software that use this extension. If you dont have the specific software that created it then you may not be able to open it. One suggestion is to try to open it in word pad or similar text editor and see if it will tell you what program created it. It may also have all the info you seek as text.
Add a track and press record.
80 bpm is what i got from listening to the song in Cubase 5
First you save your song to anywhere on the computer. Then you open iTunes and in the top left corner click add file to library it should open up a file a file browser. Find where you saved the song click on it then click open/add. And that's how it's done
Any audio editor can be used to chop up an audio file into segments. You won't be able, however, to cut apart a file so that the instruments, vocals, drums, etc. are separate parts. Audio editors include commercial programs like Cubase, Pro Tools, Sonar, Wavelab and Audition, as well as open source programs, such as Audacity.
You can't, Sorry dude. The closes thing you can do is upload a song and record along to it, but you have to keep the original song the way it is :(
first go to itunes next open the file where you save the song then go to itunes DJ and drag your song in their and when the song is already in itunes right click on the song and you will see create aac file then go to recently added in the last one that's the song that is acc file
In Windows Media Player, right-click on the song you want to use in Windows Movie Maker and choose: Open File Location. This will open the folder/file for the song on your computer. Click on the song from the file location... drag and drop it into the Windows Movie Maker Imported Media pane.
Open the directory containing the music file and drag the file onto the documents and viola the song will be on your document
download your music to the computer music file first. hook up your philips device to your computer using the cord that came with it. if the computer asks what you want to do with the device, click on open file folders. find the music file on the device and open that. once that is done, open a new window on the computer and open your computers music file. minimize both windows on your screen so that you can see them both at the same time. then, click on the song in your computer music file, drag and drop to the device music file by click and hold on the song name with the mouse and move it over to the other file. you can also left click on song name to hilight it, right click, copy. then go to device music file, right click and paste
I am almost positive it was Motown's in-house backup group, The Andantes
A backup vocalist is a member of a group of singers who provide backing vocals to a song.