Soundtracks from DVD question
#1
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Soundtracks from DVD question
I have a quick question. Is there a way to get a song used on a soundtrack off of the DVD?
The CD of the soundtrack of "The Secret of Roan Inish" just went OOP. I wanted to download some of the music onto my iPod. Can I still do this using the DVD? I would imagine that I can or is that illegal?
TIA!
The CD of the soundtrack of "The Secret of Roan Inish" just went OOP. I wanted to download some of the music onto my iPod. Can I still do this using the DVD? I would imagine that I can or is that illegal?
TIA!
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From: 9th state to secede from the Union
Originally Posted by Darknite39
Can't rip the dvd legally. Sorry.
I suggest ebay, half, or amazon.com for the CD.
I suggest ebay, half, or amazon.com for the CD.
Actually, ripping the DVD is perfectly legal (First Sale Doctrine of the 1976 Copyright Act) in the privacy of one's own home; it is "sharing" copyrighted material that is not legal.
Last edited by JOKipper; 09-11-06 at 12:14 AM.
#7
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From: Clarkston, MI
Could just do a manual audio recording while the dvd is playing if your using windows. Saves on to a .wav file i believe. (still legal?)
Just don't let anybody else listen to it or so help me God...
Just don't let anybody else listen to it or so help me God...
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From: 9th state to secede from the Union
Originally Posted by MasterCXtreme
Could just do a manual audio recording while the dvd is playing if your using windows. Saves on to a .wav file i believe. (still legal?)
Just don't let anybody else listen to it or so help me God...
Just don't let anybody else listen to it or so help me God...
The key words are "illegal duplication"...duplication in itself is not illegal. Piracy rulings have clouded the issue (and piracy is an entirely separate and different issue) until people no longer know their rights as guaranteed by fair use doctrines and reconfirmed by the U.S. Supreme Court.
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From: The city with no sports championships...Cleveland
Why do you hate buying used? I've had little trouble with DVDs/CDs, and the majority comes from new. In fact, I've never had a used DVD skip..I've had three new ones skip though.
#10
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While theoretically it might be "legal" to rip a DVD that you own, the technicality is that it is illegal to circumvent the copy protection. It's kind of like how marijuana (after 1937 and before they made it "scheduled") was still legal but you had to have a tax stamp to possess or sell it and the gov't never had any intention of selling the stamp, meaning you were breaking the law by possessing it.
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From: San Antonio, Texas
I have a couple of programs that allow you to easily capture an audio track from a CD but they don't work with DVDs. Is there an easy way to record a song from the soundtrack of a DVD?
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From: knoxville, tn
Do you feel like you need some time away from the forum? -X
http://forum.dvdtalk.com/showthread.php?t=401647
http://forum.dvdtalk.com/showthread.php?t=401647
#13
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From: Approaching the periphery shield of vortex seven
HI:
In case it helps others who want to make legal use of their stuff....
I have an audio cable that hangs out of my amplifier. Anything that goes to the speakers is running to that cable as well. If I hook it into my computer I can record whatever audio is happening. That gives you an analog-only signal which is more than good enough for my needs (listening to commentaries off my MP3 player).
To record, edit and save to MP3 I use the open source software
http://audacity.sourceforge.net/
In case it helps others who want to make legal use of their stuff....
I have an audio cable that hangs out of my amplifier. Anything that goes to the speakers is running to that cable as well. If I hook it into my computer I can record whatever audio is happening. That gives you an analog-only signal which is more than good enough for my needs (listening to commentaries off my MP3 player).
To record, edit and save to MP3 I use the open source software
http://audacity.sourceforge.net/
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From: knoxville, tn
Too bad. I wanted an mp3 (for personal use) of the entire Serenity end credits music *with the acoustic Firefly theme at the end*, which the official soundtrack omits. DMCA can suck it.
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From: Clarkston, MI
Originally Posted by canaryfarmer
Too bad. I wanted an mp3 (for personal use) of the entire Serenity end credits music *with the acoustic Firefly theme at the end*, which the official soundtrack omits. DMCA can suck it.
#17
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From: Ontario, Canada
Originally Posted by Jet_Jaguar
I have an audio cable that hangs out of my amplifier. Anything that goes to the speakers is running to that cable as well. If I hook it into my computer I can record whatever audio is happening. That gives you an analog-only signal which is more than good enough for my needs (listening to commentaries off my MP3 player).
To record, edit and save to MP3 I use the open source software
http://audacity.sourceforge.net/
I extract audio from DVDs all the time. ac3 files, DTS files...turn'em into WAVs. No one but me hears them, no one but me benefits from it, and therefore I don't have any sort of problem with it.
#18
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From: knoxville, tn
Oh, I had already made what I wanted a few months back (I was using that as an example). I was simply pointing out that if I want to create a sound file for personal use, I will.
#19
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From: Ontario, Canada
Being a film score nut, that's the primary reason why I do these things.
I even made a DTS demo CD using various 5.1 music from various film and TV shows. No one but me will ever hear it. Funny how we can't really talk about these things, as if we are all evil bootleggers who plan on raking in the bucks for things everyone has access to anyway.
Will I ever ask Canaryfarmer for the Serenity recording he did? No, never...I could do it myself (and like him, I loved that solo guitar Firefly theme at the end of the credit music)
I even made a DTS demo CD using various 5.1 music from various film and TV shows. No one but me will ever hear it. Funny how we can't really talk about these things, as if we are all evil bootleggers who plan on raking in the bucks for things everyone has access to anyway.
Will I ever ask Canaryfarmer for the Serenity recording he did? No, never...I could do it myself (and like him, I loved that solo guitar Firefly theme at the end of the credit music)
#20
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Thanks for the info on how to do this. I have been wanting the score to Carpenters The Thing for years. It's been out of print for years, but the original dvd has the isolated score. Same with A L I E N.
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From: knoxville, tn
For creating a personal soundfile that nobody else but me will ever hear? I'm not sharing it, I'm not uploading it, I'm not doing a damn thing with it other than playing it on my own machine. Prison? Come now. That's just fear-mongering.
P.S. - Admittedly, that was a pretty funny comeback, though. High fives!
P.S. - Admittedly, that was a pretty funny comeback, though. High fives!
Last edited by canaryfarmer; 09-11-06 at 09:57 PM.
#23
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From: Puget Sound
Unless someone is actually copying files and selling them I'm not aware of any law that says you can't talk about DVDs (DVD Talk).
Maybe you should try reading this long-standing thread -X
http://forum.dvdtalk.com/showthread.php?t=401647
Maybe you should try reading this long-standing thread -X
http://forum.dvdtalk.com/showthread.php?t=401647
#24
Originally Posted by Jet_Jaguar
HI:
In case it helps others who want to make legal use of their stuff....
I have an audio cable that hangs out of my amplifier. Anything that goes to the speakers is running to that cable as well. If I hook it into my computer I can record whatever audio is happening. That gives you an analog-only signal which is more than good enough for my needs (listening to commentaries off my MP3 player).
To record, edit and save to MP3 I use the open source software
http://audacity.sourceforge.net/
In case it helps others who want to make legal use of their stuff....
I have an audio cable that hangs out of my amplifier. Anything that goes to the speakers is running to that cable as well. If I hook it into my computer I can record whatever audio is happening. That gives you an analog-only signal which is more than good enough for my needs (listening to commentaries off my MP3 player).
To record, edit and save to MP3 I use the open source software
http://audacity.sourceforge.net/
We however cannot discuss methods of cracking the CSS encryption since it is illegal under the DMCA, no matter for what purposes you intend it.




