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Adding CDs purchased from Amazon to computer/phone/etc
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Roger1
Posts: 1,603 Forumite


in Techie Stuff
Some time ago, I was able to add CDs I had bought from Amazon to my computer, now included in My Music on my Android phone and elsewhere.
I don't buy much in the form of hard products (CDs, DVDs) these days, but I recently bought some CDs. Try as I might, I can't work out how to add them to My Music. BTW, I now have Amazon Prime.
Can somebody more experienced please advise me how to do so? Thanks.
I don't buy much in the form of hard products (CDs, DVDs) these days, but I recently bought some CDs. Try as I might, I can't work out how to add them to My Music. BTW, I now have Amazon Prime.
Can somebody more experienced please advise me how to do so? Thanks.
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I haven't done it since moving to spotify but I remember there was an app to download.
Ah, I can't paste the link as I am too new to the forum - sorry.
But I found it by searching for Amazon Music App and there is a download for desktop. If your CDs are covered by their digital version deal then you should see them available to download. That's how it used to work.0 -
If you've got the physical CDs, and they're not bought from Amazon as above, you need to rip them on to a computer. Hopefully you've still got a CD drive. You would have used an app on the computer like Windows Media Player or iTunes or something. Once you rip them, you've got .MP3 files, which you can do whatever you like with. Can you remember what app you used before?0
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CDs bought through Amazon often/always come with Autorip - you can go into your past purchases, order history, and download the tracks as mp3 files, so's you don't have to rip them yourself.
https://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/help/customer/display.html?nodeId=G6N9QAN4WDBKAKPF
https://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/help/customer/display.html?nodeId=GLKTE9VFZMCD7CKD
That will get them onto your PC, how you get them to phone or mp3 player will depend on those devices.0 -
CDs bought through Amazon often/always come with Autorip
I think we're talking about CDs without this feature - it's mentioned above.0 -
Thanks very much for the useful advice.
I've looked at the suggested solutions and been around the My Music Q&As again, without much success. The latter often tells me to first mark/highlight the albums I want to download to my equipment. But no matter where I look in My Music, I can't find the albums in question. If I check my Amazon purchases, I can't see how to Autorip.
One thing: the solutions suggested by Amazon require the albums to have been sold and shipped by Amazon. Well, that knocks out the Marketplace purchases. Not sure about Amazon EU - I would have expected that to be OK.
Also, I have come across this greyed out message:MUSIC STORAGE
Amazon is retiring this service ...
Amazon digital music purchases are stored for free.
Import up to 250 songs from your computer for free, including music purchased from iTunes®.
You have imported 0 songs
Import up to 250,000 songs for £21.99/year.
I'm not sure whether this information is relevant to me. Apparently, my previous purchases amount to 210 songs, none from iTunes. Sorry, I don't remember how I did it, other than clicking on a link.
I'll try again later.0 -
Windows Media Player will rip & convert cd's to MP3.... or it used too!
I haven't done it for a while but if I remember correctly it outputs the .WMA file by default so you have to go into settings to select MP3.Always try to be at least half the person your dog thinks you are!0 -
ExactAudioCopy is what I currently use for CD ripping. (Used to use CDDB but stopped when an update was triggered by MBAM as being "dodgy").
Any ripping method assumes that the OP has a DVD drive on their laptop.0 -
EAC is a free download, widely regarded as one of the best CD rippers.
Do you have an optical drive in a Windows PC?0 -
Thanks again, folks.
I'm still learning how to use my new laptop. It has neither a DVD drive nor an optical drive. At least, only web results came up when I searched in the Windows box.
I see optical drives available for £12-25 online. Presumably DVD drives too. Hmm. Only I can decide whether they would be worthwhile. At this stage, the MP3 solution looks OK.0 -
I'm still learning how to use my new laptop. It has neither a DVD drive nor an optical drive.
Find a friend or family member with one, and get them to rip for you?
Look for a local HiFi or audio enthusiast group in your area, make contact, befriend someone with the gear to do this for you?0
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