It’s classical
I would burn the CD to my computer hard drive, then move it to google drive (or microsoft onedrive) and then share it with my son so he could access the cloud drive. I have been messing around with microsoft onedrive for the past 2 days trying to get my wife’s water aerobics music onto her phone.
Windows Media Player uploads it in .wma format, I believe my son will need it in an .mp3 (or similar) format?
Could you use Dropbox? I think I have had people send me individual songs via Dropbox, but I don’t know if you could retain the sequence of a burned CD.
Don’t use windows media player. The ripper isn’t the best for reliable ripping and the wma format cannot be used in other players.
Then again, I tend to feel itunes’ CD ripper while better isn’t good enough by my admittedly anal standards.
I use exactaudio copy in windows which has options to account for each CD drive’s error correction and ripping capabilities more precisely and double checks each rip to ensure as perfect a rip as possible. However, it’s nowhere near as user friendly and is mainly used by more hardcore audiophiles or techies.
Dropbox is another great option to share music albums.
The sequence of songs would usually be taken care of by itunes and most reasonably good ripping programs.
Also considering the son doesn’t have a CD drive/player, he’s unlikely to need or have much use for a burned CD.
When someone is clearly overwhelmed by the options available (not said as a slam at all, I would be too) it’s not helpful to provide obscure, non-user friendly solutions.
Ok found a work around as Spotify and Google Play wouldn’t add the music?
Used Google Drive and loaded the songs in .wma format
Then used cloud convert (online) and converted from .wma to .m4a back to Google Drive.
Works!
Or Do you have iTunes 12 for windows? Can you import the cd into iTunes on your computer- you can change it from a MPGE-4 (standard on IOS and your best quality) to a MP3 by going to import settings on iTunes windows12 from there switch settings to MP3
Choose import options
Choose Edit > Preferences, click General, and click Import Settings.
Choose an encoding format from the Import Using pop-up menu. Then scroll down to find and select
MP3 Encoder: Use if you plan to listen to music in apps other than iTunes, or on MP3 players other than iPod, iPhone, or iPad.
While it “works”, that’s a sub-optimal solution as converting from one lossy format like wma to an apple lossy format will risk more loss of the original musical dynamics and introduce undesirable artifacts which can be noticible even on lower-end musical stereos/computer speakers.
Especially if the genre concerned has a wider dynamic range such as classical music.