How to Edit Songs for iPhone Ringtones
- If you’ve got an iPhone, you probably already have iTunes on the computer that you use to sync your iPhone files. (If not, download iTunes) Then plug in your iPhone so it’s showing up in iTunes.
- I’m assuming that you may have a batch of songs that you’d like to edit into iPhone ringtones, so we going to guide you along under this assumption. Just doing one is a very simple matter, and you can adjust these instructions easily enough to suit your needs. To avoid “contaminating” your normal iTunes library, make copies of the songs you’d like to make into ringtones and put them in a separate, easy to find folder.
- Import them into a special playlist in iTunes that you’ve made just
for them. This will allow you to create ringtones from excerpts rather
than entire songs without modifying those same songs in your main
library.
- Select a song that you’d like to edit and use as an iPhone ringtone. Play it until you find the part of the song that want to make into your ringtone, and jot down the beginning and ending times. May as well do this for all of the songs you’re turning into ringtones now. It may take a while. Make sure you’ve got a big glass of water handy and hydrate often.
- Right click on a song, and select Get Info.
- Click on the Options tab.
- Enter the start time and stop time, desired volume, and equalizer
preset (if you like). Don’t forget to check the little box that says
Remember Playback Position! (As a side note, wouldn’t it be awesome if
the little pulldown menu next to Media Kind had a “ringtone” option you
could select to avoid this whole nonsense altogether? Far be it for me
to have ideas that might make life easier. Sigh.)
- Here’s where you make sure these truncated versions of the songs can
be converted into ringtones. You’ll need to convert them into Apple’s
AAC (.m4a) format like so:
- Select Edit, then Preferences.
- Click on the General tab.
- Go to Import Settings (it’s a button toward the middle).
- Import Using: AAC Encoder.
- Back at Preferences, click on the Advanced tab.
- Change iTunes Media folder location to match the folder where your
copies are. (This will save you from having to go hunting through the
current default iTunes media folder when it comes to a future step.)
- Select all of the songs in the playlist and right click.
- Click on Create AAC Version.
- Go to the folder where the copies are. You’ll notice that there are now a bunch of sub-folders that iTunes has graciously added. In this series of sub-folders, manually change the file extensions from .m4a to .m4r. As you do so, double click on the changed files and they’ll automatically get imported into the settings to be synced with your iPhone. If there’s already a Ringtones folder on your iPhone, that’s where they’ll go. If there isn’t one, it’ll darned well make its own!Now you should have a custom ringtone (or several) to play around with on your iPhone, designating it (or them) to contacts as you see fit. Not as hard as you thought, but it still could have been easier if Apple just made iTunes a little more friendly toward this purpose, no? At least you learned, in a roundabout way, how to edit songs for iPhone ringtones.
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