![]() ![]() I personally held onto around 700 records made before the 90s, in addition to a few boxes of records my parents left in my care. Over time, many of us stopped listening to LPs altogether – but that doesn’t mean we got rid of them. Eventually, most of us gave in to temptation and started listening only (or mostly) to files stored on a computer somewhere in the house. We complained that the typical MP3 was encoded at bitrates too low to do justice to the music, but we learned to encode at higher resolutions, or to use uncompressed/lossless formats. We complained that CDs lacked the “warmth” of vinyl, but CD technology got better over time. We loved our vinyl despite and because of its warts, but we also didn’t hesitate to go digital when the time came – first with CDs, and then with MP3s and other file-based formats. The cost of admission was pops and scratches, warped discs, having to get up in the middle of an album to flip the disc, cleaning the grooves from time to time, and getting hernias every time you moved to a new apartment. Dragging a rock through vinyl was not some kind of nostalgic love affair with the past – it was just the way things were. Long-playing records represent an era when music was less disposable – we actually sat down to listen, rather than treating music as a backdrop to the rest of life. LPs were music you could touch, with glorious full-color 12″ album art, meandering liner notes, and the practical involvement of lowering needle to plastic. Hundreds of pounds of space-consuming, damage-prone vinyl. ![]() ![]() Software and website Copyright AlpineSoft, 2023.For anyone over 40 (or maybe 30), having a music collection probably means that, in addition to racks of CDs and ridiculous piles of MP3s, you’re also sitting on bookshelves (or “borrowed” milk crates) full of vinyl LPs. Please note this version is very old, and, in particular, the online databases no longer work. If you have Tiger or Leopard, you can download VinylStudio V8.2.3 from here. Please tell us where you found out about VinylStudio: Download VinylStudio for Macintosh (macOS 10.12 Sierra and later) Download VinylStudio for Macintosh (macOS 10.11 El Capitan and earlier) Then just run the downloaded package to install the software. If you have OS X 10.11 (El Capitan) or earlier you can download an alternative version of VinylStudio (which offers the same feature set) below.Ĭlick on the button below to download the software (~15MB). Either an Intel or Apple Silicon Mac (the same package works for both).A decent amount of disk space for your audio files. ![]() VinylStudio for Macintosh has the following hardware and software requirements: This should not interfere with your ability to evaluate the product and if you subsequently decide to purchase you can carry on from where you left off. Please note that there are some restrictions on saving files in the trial version and any CDs you burn are limited to 5 tracks each. Any recordings you have made with the trial version will be preserved. Beyond this, you will need to upgrade to the full version (by purchasing a license key) if you wish to continue using the program. You can download a fully functional free trial copy of VinylStudio which will allow you to record upto 5 albums with no time limit. Download VinylStudio for Macintosh V13.1.0 ![]()
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