|
You can
put your songs on the Internet with a Real audio file, or an
MP3 file.
1st, you
need to have an audio file to work with. This is made from a
recording you have done and made a wave file from. Most people
use recording
software to make that. An audio file in a wave format is
generally much to large to post to the internet and would take
to much time to download. That is why people will compress these
files to MP3 or real audio type formats. You can purchase internet
space by registering a domain name and finding a company to
host (store) your web site, or use a free
web space provider.
Once you
have the audio file you can convert it to an MP3 file and post
to the internet. Several software titles available
here will allow you to do that.
Real audio
is another method of saving a audio file to the internet.
Real Audio
is a compressed form of audio. Check out the site at http://www.real.com
You can
get a player (RealPlayer G2), and an encoder (RealProducer G2),
for free there. If the name of either the player or the producer
contains the word "PLUS" in it.. (such as RealPlayer
Plus G2).. that is not the free version. Make sure it
doesn't say 'plus' unless you want to purchase it.
You can
first record your song, then use the encoder to encode the file
to Real Audio. Or you can encode your song while you play it
live... but the quality is less in this case. It would be good
to experiment with live encoding vs encoding from a wav file.
Once your
Real Audio file is uploaded onto your website, you can provide
a link to your song which will have a file name with the .ra
extention. Then, people visiting your site can click on the
link and begin to download your song. Only after the song is
downloaded will their player automatically open up and begin
playing the song.
You can
create a text file that contains the complete URL of your song.ra
file location, and give this text file a name that has the .ram
extention on it (see 'how to' instructions below). If you then
provide a link to this text.ram file on your site, you will
have enabled people to stream your songs rather than wait for
the download.
If visitors
to your site click on the .ram link instead of the .ra link,
it will open up their player first before downloading. Once
the player is open, the song will play as it's
being downloaded onto their computer. The player may take a
few seconds to 'buffer' but this is nothing compared to waiting
for the whole file to download.
Downloading
vs streaming?
You might
want to provide a streaming link because it's only temporarily
stored on the user's computer, or just to provide quicker access
to your songs. You might want to provide a download link for
people who don't mind waiting for the whole song to load in
first since they don't have to worry about net congestion interrupting
the play back.
That's why
I prefer to provide both options. The text.ram file containing
the URL for your song.ra location will only take about 1K of
webspace, since it is simply the URL of your song and nothing
else. So people who prefer quicker access to the song can click
on the streaming link, while people who don't like net congestion
interrupting the song will prefer to download it.
How to
create a streaming real audio file:
These
instructions assume you already know how to put up a website,
create a Real Audio file, and upload files. If you don't,
there are links below to a great html lessons page, to real
audio encoder tutorials, and to websites that offer free webspace.
When you sign up for free webspace they usually have instructions
for you to get started uploading files. You don't have to
know html with at least some of these but if you do.. it's
so much easier to get your site the way you want it.
As an example,
lets say you created an RA file called inmysoul.ra. Once you
have uploaded your inmysoul.ra file up on your site, open up
your text editor... such as windows 95's Notepad. The only thing
you type in this text file, right from the first available space,
is the location of your inmysoul.ra on your website.
So, if your
inmysoul.ra is at http://www.fortunecity.com/bootsy/624/inmysoul.ra
then that is exactly what you type in the text editor. That,
and nothing else.
Then when
you save that text file, you need to name it. This is the name
that gets the .ram extention. For this one, you might name it
inmysoul.ram.
Then you'd
upload the inmysoul.ram file to your website, and put a link
to this .ram file on your page along with the .ra file.
The full
URL of the .ram file would then be http://www.fortunecity.com/bootsy/624/inmysoul.ram.
Now it's
all ready to be clicked on! Go to the site and click on the
.ram file and see if it streams for you.
Helpful
Links
Real Audio's "How to stream" page using 5.0 or
earlier encoders. This is Real Audio's 'how to' info on http
streaming and creating .ram files.
The RealProducer G2 User's Guide can be downloaded from
here.
Jim
Hartley's Real Audio tutorial
This is a great page that teaches you how to use Cool Edit to
make a wav file, then encode it into a real audio file. It also
teaches you how to stream, not just one song at a time, but
one song after another without having to keep clicking songs!
It even contains pictures of different cool edit and RA encoder
5.0 screens.
Zap's
Music On The Net Tutorial This page is about putting your
music up on the internet. It discusses different audio formats
(MIDI, MOD, RealAudio, their pro's and con's), how to add MIDI
or streaming RealAudio to your web page, and an explanation
of "mime types".
Writing
html -- An excellent tutorial for creating webpages.
This is how I learned html, and I really enjoyed doing these
lessons!! They take you step by step creating your own 'Volcano'
website on your local hard drive. By the time you are done..
you should be able to create your own web site from scratch
with minimal referencing.
Plus there
is summary
of html tags used in the tutorial.
Just in case you forget what some tags are or what they do,
you can go to the summary page and look them up.
Don't
have a website but need free webspace?
There are
a number of places that offer different amounts of free webspace.
If you use up all the free webspace you could always purchase
additional webspace from them. But I've signed up with Tripod
for some of my pages, and with Fortunecity for the others, so
altogether that's 31 mb of free webspace available to me!! Real
Audio doesn't stream well on some of these. My RA's didn't stream
well on the tripod site, but they did fine at the fortunecity
site. I haven't tried any of the others.
Tripod
offers 11 mb of free webspace.
Fortunecity offers
20 mb of free webspace.
Angelfire offers 5 mb
of free webspace.
Xoom offers 10 mb of free
webspace.
Geocities offers 10 mb
of free webspace.
In addition,
Aol offers 10 mb of free space but they are split at 2 mb per
screen name.
Compuserve offers 5 mb of free space.
There are
others that offer less than 5 mb but look for those which offer
at least 5 mb. There are probably others out there that I don't
know about.
Click
here to learn how to record music using your computer and for
software that you will need to do so.
Return
to www.writingsongs.com
Dave
Byers
Dave
is the founder of "writingsongs.com
and the Christian
Songwriters Organization. He has been writing songs since
1979. His book "Songwriting
fundamentals" is available by clicking here.

|