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i got into making mixtapes VERY recently and the process is pretty straightforward but it confused me a lot. i'm young so the idea of making tapes was fun and all, but i never really understood the logistics of recording music onto a tape, and the guides i found online seemed to assume you knew on some level how tapes work. i still don't really know how tapes work but here's how i stumbled my way into having five mixtapes at the time of writing that i made in like a couple days.
so before we get into the actual recording, even after you have all the supplies, there's some shit we gotta get out of the way. first is explaining how the recording shit works. this is a little convoluted so i'll try to summarize in bullet points and keep it short:
i don't really know how this all works tech-wise, nor do i fully understand it - all i know is that this shit works the way i do it so that's how i'm writing about it. it gets a lot more confusing and stupid if you look it up and i don't even know the difference between line in and headphones or whatever the fuck but does it matter? kind of yeah but i got this to work without fully understanding so whatever
next: your music! your playlist/mixtape/whatever! you gotta predetermine the songs you want and how to organize them to fit on the tape. there's a couple things to worry about here: the length of the tape, and the two different sides. the sides will split the duration of the tape: in other words, on a 60 minute tape, side A and B are 30 minutes each. on a 90 minute tape, side A and B are about 45 minutes each. you have to organize your playlist into two sides, and make sure that the songs for each side do not exceed the duration limits of the tape. this is generally not something i worry about because my mixes are usually small (the way of 8tracks dot com baby, 8-10 tracks total is how i do it!), but if you're putting long playlists to tape, you definitely have to do some math to make sure the tracks will fit.
when it comes to the music itself, since essentially all you're doing is recording from the sound output of your device, you can get it from anywhere. you can record from a streaming service, youtube, whatever, if you want. i personally collect digital music (piracy and buying but mostly piracy) and am deeply, abnormally committed to keeping my library organized, so typically, i will write down and organize my planned playlist, take the music files and copy them from their albums into a new folder, order the tracks, then split them into two folders for both sides. after that, i'll transfer the playlist folder to my music player, and begin recording.
ok we're done with prep we can finally get to the fun part. once you have your music device whatever thing connected with your cassette recorder, take your blank tape and insert it into the recorder, making sure side A faces you so you record onto that side. next, BEFORE YOU HIT PLAY ON YOUR MUSIC DEVICE, on the recorder, press the “play” and “record” buttons at the same time - or maybe you can just hit record but on most models you hit them both at the same time. then, wait at least 10-25 seconds, maybe count it in your head, and THEN you hit play on your music player. it might record some dead noise at the start this way but if you do it too fast and without waiting it won't record.
ALSO, make sure your music device is at a low to medium volume, or else the tape will record at a high volume! this one took a while to click in my head. you can do a couple test recordings to figure out the volume - just make sure you rewind to the beginning at the tape after each test, and do the wait thing before trying again, and probably don't do it too much you might fuck up the same (2-3 times should be ok??).
then you just wait for a while as it records. you gotta let it play through the music and everything. if you have a long playlist this might take forever.
make sure you periodically check in on your music player to see what song it's on, so you know when to stop playback and flip to side B. i recommend splitting your playlist into two different sides so that, when it's time to flip, it doesn't keep recording or anything on side A into the side B section of songs, if that makes sense. this is why i mentioned i split my playlist into two folders to put on my player, so that it'll automatically stop at the end of the side A folder. just make sure you keep checking your player throughout this so you know when songs are over and when it's time to flip or stop recording.
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