Sreyan Chakravarty:
>> Also when I am burning audio discs do the files need to be in the
>> WAV format or can I directly burn MP3 and it will convert as needed?

Frank Elsner:
> It depends ...
> 
> - When you want to burn a Audio-CD to be played by an (old-style) CD-
> Player the files must be in WAV format, sampling rate must be 44.100
> Hz and stereo.
> 
> - Newer CD-Players support the MP3-format also for the tracks and you
> must convert convert WAV to MP3 by your own. Afterwards you burn an
> ISO 9660 file system.

A compact disc (CDDA - compact disc digital audio) has no files on the
disc.  It's audio streaming data with a table of contents.

Burning software can take some kinds of audio files, and create a
standard CDDA disc.  Some burning software is quite flexible, and can
convert what you supply into what it needs.  Others depend on you
supplying the audio files in a specific format (44.1 kHz, as mentioned,
but mono is supported as well, and usually as uncompressed WAV files).

If you create a CD-ROM with audio files on it, that's not a compact
disc in the ordinary sense.  Only some players can handle computer
discs with computer audio files on them, and that situation has existed
for well over a decade.  So new or old, relatively speaking, isn't
really part of the equation.

Brasero, for instance, *can* handle a MP3 file to create an audio CD. 
But it may well depend on some plug-ins and/or CODECs being installed
that you haven't got.  e.g. gstreamer plugins.  MP3 is still considered
a bit naughty by some on Fedora, so you may have to get support files
from non-fedora repos.

You're probably just missing MP3 support, even if some other
applications can play MP3s (some programs support it themselves, and
there's several different possible CODECs that are used by different
applications).

Doing a search for guides using keywords like these (together)

    brasero audio cd from mp3 fedora

may help in your quest, if you can't figure it out yourself.  Or
perhaps, just a DNF search with mp3 keyword.

I haven't bothered with trying to burn audio CDs on current Fedora, nor
on older Fedora's for a couple of years, so I can't supply a prepared
solution for this.  But, on CentOS, I have these plug-ins installed
(more than you'll need):

gstreamer1-libav-1.10.4-2.el7.x86_64
gstreamer1-plugins-good-1.10.4-2.el7.x86_64
PackageKit-gstreamer-plugin-1.1.10-2.el7.centos.x86_64
gstreamer1-plugins-bad-free-gtk-1.10.4-3.el7.x86_64
gstreamer1-plugins-bad-freeworld-1.10.4-2.el7.x86_64
gstreamer-tools-0.10.36-7.el7.x86_64
gstreamer1-1.10.4-2.el7.x86_64
gstreamer-plugins-bad-free-0.10.23-23.el7.x86_64
gstreamer1-plugins-ugly-free-1.10.4-3.el7.x86_64
gstreamer-plugins-good-0.10.31-13.el7.x86_64
gstreamer1-plugins-bad-free-1.10.4-3.el7.x86_64
gstreamer-plugins-base-0.10.36-10.el7.x86_64
gstreamer1-plugins-ugly-1.10.5-2.el7.x86_64
phonon-backend-gstreamer-4.6.3-3.el7.x86_64
gstreamer1-plugins-base-1.10.4-2.el7.x86_64
gstreamer-0.10.36-7.el7.x86_64

-- 
 
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