iTunes playback: retaining orig song gaps?


Maybe this forum will provide more input from those a little more discerning than the 128kbps iPod crowd?

I searched and searched and searched online for info on ADDING a gap between songs during playback from iTunes on a computer (not iPod). There is a ton of info on removing gaps betweem songs.

Why?
I want this when listening to an entire album from track 1 to end as it was produced. As you know after a song is over, you will see a brief "-00:03, -00:02, -00:01" on the display counter. Most CDs are created with this type of slight gap. Of course DJ Mix CDs , and custom home mixes don't have the gap. But for many professional CDs a small gap as it is the intent of the artist/musician/producer.

But, when you play back in iTunes, the gap disappears. that information is not included when you burn to a hard drive. iTunes does not have an option to ADD a gap during playback. [ "Crossfade Playback" function is the exact opposite of what I am seeking: is overlaps the songs....] I use iTunes every day and it ain't there. I wonder how other dedicated digital media servers (olive, roku, accomplish this?) I think it's an easy adder for the next iTunes version....It would look like this:

[ ] Song Gap Playback:

Add 1 .......................... 4 seconds.

OR does anyone else know of some other iTunes plug-in, tweak? I have 300+ CDs (and growing) burned to my external hard drive from CDs and and often want to listen to the entire CD, instead of a playlist.

If anyone has any ideas, please write a response. Grazie.
audioalways

Showing 2 responses by photon46

Not sure what version of Itunes you're using. I go to the pull down menu in Itunes that says "Itunes" on left left of the toolbar and select "preferences," then select "advanced," then 'burning." You now have a menu that should give you what you want if I understand you correctly.
Sorry, my morning caffeine hadn't kicked in yet when I read your post. Yeah, Itunes can be irritating in this respect. I've never found a way to accomplish what you want to do either. Here's hoping the new operating system they release in the spring will address this issue.