By the way i have an Aple Mac Book Pro.
5 point to the best answer!
Logic Pro 8
But don't expect to get professional results overnight. Producing music is something that can take a whole career to grasp, and the software only provides the tools that *would not hinder you* to get the results. They don't help you as such, they just don't put any barriers in your way.
So get swatting up on sound, phase, digital audio, EQ, compression and dynamics, gain structure, effective use of panning and soundstage, etc etc.
I'm sorry to be the bringer of bad news, but you can't avoid the fact that producing good music is a huge skill at all stages. The words easy and professional can't go in the same sentence. You're not a highly skilled carpenter just because you buy a nice chisel... http://answers.yahoo.com/question/accuse_write?qid=20081214023305AAid41x&kid=BoRNOjL9E1E45gg0YNZT&s=comm&date=2008-12-21+09%3A49%3A21&.crumb=
Audacity (http://audacity.sourceforge.net/) is a free digital audio editor application. Audacity is cross-platform, using the wxWidgets software library to provide a similar graphical user interface on several different operating systems.
Some of Audacity's features include:
* Importing and exporting WAV, AIFF, MP3 (via the LAME encoder, downloaded separately), Ogg Vorbis, all file formats supported by libsndfile library
* Version 1.3.2 also supports Free Lossless Audio Codec (FLAC)
* Recording and playing sounds
* Editing via Cut, Copy, Paste (with unlimited Undo)
* Multi-track mixing
* A large array of digital effects and plug-ins. Additional effects can be written with Nyquist
* Amplitude envelope editing
* Noise removal
* Support for multi-channel modes with sampling rates up to 96 kHz with 24 bits per sample
* The ability to make precise adjustments to the audio's speed while maintaining pitch (Audacity calls it changing tempo), in order to synchronize it with video, run for the right length of time, etc.
* The ability to change the audio's pitch without changing the speed.
* Converting cassette tapes or records into digital tracks by automatically splitting one wav (or the other supported types) track into multiple tracks based on silences in the track and the export multiple option.
* Multi-platform: works on Windows, Mac OS X, and Unix-like systems (including GNU/Linux and BSD) amongst others.
The latest versions support Windows 98/ME/2000/XP/Vista, but Windows 95 and NT are not supported.
Audacity can also be used for post-processing of all types of audio, including podcasts. It can be used for finishing podcasts by adding effects such as normalization, trimming, and fading in and out.
It is currently used in the OCR National Level 2 ICT course for the sound creation unit.
I think ImTOO Audio Maker is your best choice,It alway works well for me. It is an all-in-one music converter and Music CD burner to make music CD from music files such as MP2, MP3, WMA, WAV, M4A, AAC, AC3, and OGG, and convert to audio files from video files such as AVI, MPEG, MPG, DAT (the video format used in VCD and SVCD), VOB (the video format used in DVD), WMV, ASF, MOV, QT, MP4, 3GP, and RM. Audio maker is also a perfect music CD ripper to rip music CD/audio CD to MP2, MP3, WMA, WAV, APE, M4A, AAC, AC3, FLAC and OGG. The music CD ripper is a powerful music CD burner to burn music to CD.
You can download a free trial to check it out, You can free download it here: http://www.kooksoft.com/ImTOO-Audio-Maker-v3-0_581.html
If you inserested in it, here is a step by step guide about how to use it:
http://www.kooksoft.com/How-to-convert-music-files-such-as-WAV--WMA--M4A-to-MP3-format-_1009.html
I hope this may help you
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