Thanks, I actually haven’t tried this since the iTunes update last week and 
while I downloaded it, I haven’t actually installed it yet. I saw something 
from Jonathan I think on Twitter that some of the fields like artist name, song 
title and so on are more easily editable again, but haven’t checked it out yet.

 

From: viphone@googlegroups.com [mailto:viphone@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of 
Christopher J Chaltain
Sent: Saturday, April 18, 2015 6:58 PM
To: viphone@googlegroups.com
Subject: Re: Creating ringtones from songs using iTunes 12 - the complete guide

 

Hey Sieghard, I just wanted to say thanks for writing up this tutorial and 
sending it to the list. I've been working more with the music on my phone 
lately, and creating some ring tones from my music was one of the things I 
wanted to do. Your tutorial was just the ticket, and the archive of this list 
is a great resource.

On 11/23/2014 7:11 PM, Sieghard Weitzel wrote:

Hello Listers,

 

As promised, here is as complete a guide as I could come up with describing how 
you can make ringtones from your songs using iTunes 12. This has headings, both 
level 1 and 2 which you can use if you want to get back to a particular 
section. After explaining the process and after the “Clean up” heading is 
another heading called “More details about adding to library and syncing” and 
it goes into more details about how to correctly rename the file extension and 
how to sync your tones to your phone.

I did it this way because for more advanced users some of my descriptions may 
already contain more details than necessary, but for people who are new to 
technology or less experienced with Windows commands it is hopefully useful.

I also realize that you can add ringtones to your library by copying them into 
the “Automatically Add to Library” folder. If you prefer to do this than that’s 
fine, I personally prefer to put stuff into the folder where it belongs and add 
it to the library either by simply playing it or by using the “Add /File to 
Library” or “Add Folder to Library” option in the iTunes File menu.

I wanted to provide a tutorial on how to make ringtones from songs since 
several people asked for it and I did the same for iTunes 11. I don’t want to 
start a debate on how to do it better by using a different program to create 
the ringtone, if anybody feels they know of a better way than all I can say is 
go ahead and create your own tutorial and this way people can choose which 
method they want to use.

 

Creating ringtones from songs using iTunes 12

Note: These instructions are based on doing this on a Windows 7 laptop with 
Jaws 16. Most of this should work fine with other screenreaders except of 
course for Jaws specific commands like “route Jaws cursor to PC cursor” and 
“left mouse click with Jaws”. You would simply have to know or find out which 
are equivalent commands in Window Eyes, NVDA or whatever other screenreader you 
might use.

 


Basic steps


 

1. Find the song you want

2. Press Control+I for "Get Info", tab to the options button, tab to start and 
end time and set end time to no more than 40 seconds.

3. Right click on your song and select "Create AAC Version"

4. Press Control+C on the newly created 40 second version of the song to copy 
it to the clipboard, open your iTunes Media\Tones folder and use Control+V to 
paste the song into the folder.

5. Go to the Tools menu of your Windows Explorer window, go to Folder Options 
and the View tab, make sure "Hide extensions for known file types"

is Off.

6. Rename the .M4A extension to M4R.

7. Press enter on the newly renamed file to play it in iTunes, this 
automatically adds it to your Tones library.

8. Connect your phone, make sure Sync All Tones is selected or if you sync 
selected tones, make sure your new ringtone is checked, then sync your phone.

 


detailed instructions


 

1. Find the song you want to make into a ringtone in your Music library in 
iTunes.

 

2. Right click, use the application menu key or Shift+F10 and select "Get 
Info". You can also use The shortcut key which is Control+I.

 

3. Tab to the "Options" button (should be 8 tabs) and activate it by pressing 
the spacebar or enter.

Note that nothing obvious happens, but visually the "Options" content now is on 
the screen and you have to tab to it. Unfortunately the cursor seems to go back 
to the beginning of this entire screen, but instead of using tab about 15 
times, you can use F6 about six or seven times to get to where you enter the 
start and stop time for the ringtone.

 

 


Changing Start and Stop time


 

4. The first item you get to will just say "Start read only", then if you tab 
once there is a checkbox which is read as "0 checkbox not checked" and if you 
tab again you will be on the actual field where you can type in a start time 
and which by default is always read as "0 o'clock read only".

The only way to get into the edit field for start and stop time that works for 
me is as follows:

1.       Route the Jaws cursor to the PC cursor by pressing Jaws Key+NumPad 
Minus.

2.       Do a left click with Jaws Key+NumPad Slash.

3.       Jaws will say "button edit" and you can now delete the 0 and type in 
the start time you want.

It is not necessary to first check the start time checkbox, if you change the 
value it will get checked automatically.

 

usually you start at the beginning of the song, i.e. 0:00, but if the song 
starts very slow you may want to find a good spot a few seconds from the 
beginning where you start the ringtone.

If you do change the start time, make sure you don't press enter after typing 
in your time because this will take you all the way back to the beginning and 
you have to tap about 16 times or press F6 a bunch of times to get back to the 
stop time. Instead just press tab from the edit field to go to "Stop".

 

5. Here again you first have the "Stop read only" label, than the "0 checkbox 
not checked" and lastly the field where you can edit the stop time. By default 
the stop time is the total length of the song.

As with start time, , route Jaws cursor to PC cursor, then left click. You are 
now in the edit field and the cursor is at the end of the time, you can left 
arrow across it or simply delete it all and type in your stop time.

 

Make sure that the stop time doesn't exceed the start time by more than 40 
seconds which is the maximum length of a ringtone.

 

6. After you enter your stop time you want to press the OK button so you can 
play the song and listen to how your segment sounds. Instead of tabbing about 
12 times to get to the OK button, you can now just press Enter and if you press 
Enter a second time it will take you back to your song listing and if you press 
enter a third time the song will play.

 

Only the part of the song you selected will play and you can see if it sounds 
good the way it is.

If it stops in the middle of a note or word you can make it a few seconds 
shorter to find a better place.

I usually set the stop time to 39 or 40 seconds and then make it shorter to 
make it sound good.

 


A Note on the start and stop time format


 

The start time is displayed as 0:00 where the first 0 means 0 minutes, then a 
":" and then the 00 after that is for the seconds.

The stop time by default has the ending time of the song, for example

3:23.46 where the first 3 is the number of minutes, then the ":", then the next 
2 digits are the seconds and then a "." and the last number or numbers is I 
guess maybe in one tenth of a second or even one hundreds, not quite sure, but 
it's a very small increment.

 


Creating the AAC version of your selection


 

7. Bring up the context menu with a right click, press the application menu key 
or Shift+F10 and select "Creat AAC Version".

Almost immediately you will hear that tri-tone iTunes makes when it's finished 
doing something.

This will create an AAC version of the song for only the section of the song 
you specified.

This new short song will appear right underneath the original song in your list 
of songs, so you just have to down arrow once to find it.

You can press enter to play it one last time and to make sure it is as you want 
it.

 

Note:

If you don't see a "Create AAC Version option when you right click on the song, 
go to "Edit" and "Preferences" or use the shortcut which is Control+Comma.

On the General tab click on Import settings, the shortcut is Alt+O.

Verify that the AAC encoder settings are selected, if MP3 is selected as the 
encoder you have to change it to AAC.

Also make sure you select iTunes Plus" for the quality setting so you get a 
good quality ringtone.

 


Copying, renaming, adding to library and syncing


 

8. Select the newly created short AAC version of the song in iTunes and press 
CTRL+C for "copy". Open your iTunes folder (most likely in "My Music", go to 
the "iTunes Media" folder and the "Tones" or "Ringtones" folder. Press 
Control+V to paste the song into the Ringtones folder.

 

9. Right click on the file and select rename or press the shortcut which is F2. 
Change the extention for the file which will be .M4A to .M4R. Confirm that you 
want to rename the file.

 

Note:

If you press F2 and don't see the extention, go to "Tools" and "Folder Option". 
On the "View Tab" turn off "Hide Extentions for known file types".

You can turn it back on after you are done creating your ringtones.

 

10. After you have renamed the song with the .M4R extention, press Enter on the 
song which will start playing your new ringtones in iTunes. This step is 
important because by playing it, the tone will automatically be added to your 
Tones library.

 

11. Sync your iPhone with iTunes and your new ringtone will be available.

 

Note:

If you have "Sync selected ringtones" turned on, you first have to go to your 
phone under Devices, tab to the Tones tab, check it and then check the ringtone 
you created in the list of ringtones before it will sync to your phone.

 

Clean-Up

 

1. When you are done you can delete the short version of the song you created 
from your iTunes library.

Go back to the Music Library, find the short version of the song you created 
and press delete, when prompted select "Move to recycle bin".

This is OK because you already moved the ringtone to the Ringtones folder and 
no longer need this copy of it.

 

2. Remember to uncheck the start and stop time checkboxes for the original song 
otherwise only the selected part of the song will play.

Use Control+I for Get Info, tab to the Options button and activate it. Now use 
F6 until you get to Start, tab once and uncheck the checkbox. Tab to the Stop 
checkbox and uncheck it as well.

Tab to OK and press the spacebar.

 


More details about adding to library and syncing


 


Assumption and the Tones folder


 

When you installed iTunes the default location where iTunes data is kept is 
your Music folder. If you use Windows 7 and your user name is “MyName”, this 
would be at c:\users\MyName\music.

Here you would have an iTunes folder and in that iTunes folder is a subfolder 
called “iTunes Media”.

Inside iTunes Media are subfolders for the various media types. These folders 
(you may not have all of them) would be things like Audio Books, Automatically 
Add to iTunes, Books, Downloads, Home Videos, Mobile Applications, Movies, 
Music, Podcasts, Tones and TV Shows.

If you have never purchased a movie or TV show, chances are you may not have 
these folders.

 

If you don’t have a Tones folder, you can create one just using standard 
Windows commands, then put your ringtones into that folder. Don’t worry about 
any of the default ringtones Apple provides, they are part of iOS and won’t 
appear anywhere.

 


Ringtone format


 

For ringtones to work on an iPhone, they must be in Apple’s AAC format and have 
an extension of m4r.

You can rename any AAC file (MPEG-4 Audio File) of 40 seconds or less to have 
the m4R extension.

If you have to change the extension, do the following:

 

1.            In your Tones folder, press “Alt+T” for the Tools menu.

2.            Up arrow once to select “Folder Options” which is at the very 
bottom of that menu hence you can up arrow to wrap around to the end and get to 
it right away. 

You could also just press Alt+T followed by “o”.

3.            Press Control+Tab to go to the “View tab” of the multi-tab 
dialogue which opens.

4.            Your screenreader should say something like “Treeview, Files and 
Folders, 18 items”.

5.            Arrow down until you get to an items which says “Hide extensions 
for known file types, on” and press the spacebar to change it to “off”.

6. Tab to “OK” and activate it with spacebar or enter.

 

If you now check any tones you have in your folder you will hear the name 
followed by .m4r and if you have any that are still m4a, use the F2 (Rename) 
command and just change the “a” to an “r”. You will see the following warning 
when you change a file extension, in this case go ahead and select "Yes":

 

Rename

If you change a file name extension, the file might become unusable.

Are you sure you want to change it?

Yes No

 

Also remember that you can’t just rename an MP3 file/ringtone by changing the 
.mp3 extension to .m4r, this will not work since it’s a completely different 
format and 

you would have to first convert the MP3 ringtone to the AAC format and then 
rename it.

 

I also suggest you go back into Tools, Folder Options and set Hide extensions 
for known file types back to On in order to avoid accidently changing the 
extension of a file.

 


Adding Tones to your Tones library in iTunes


 

Now that your tones are in the Tones folder, you still have to add them to your 
iTunes library. You can do this in a couple of different ways. My 2 favorite 
methods are this:

 

1.            If you only have a few tones, you can just press enter on each 
one. This will open iTunes if it’s not already open and start the tone playing. 
You can stop it by pressing the spacebar, Alt+Tab back to your Tones folder and 
repeat until you have played all the tones you want to add. Each time as the 
tone plays it is added to the Tones library (shortcut key in iTunes to get to 
that is Control+8).

2.            If you have a lot of tones, just close your Tones folder and open 
iTunes. Go to the Tones library with Control+8. Now press Alt+F to get to the 
File menu and select the “Add Folder to Library”.

A standard Windows Open dialogue appears, browse to your Tones folder, then tab 
to “Select” and activate it by pressing enter or spacebar. This will add all 
tones in your Tones folder to the tones library.

You can use F6 or tab to find the list view of Tones and arrow down through the 
list to see if they are all there, pressing enter on any of them will start 
playing it. Your Tones are now ready to be synced to your phone.

 


Syncing Tones to your iPhone


 

1.            Connect your iPhone to the computer and open iTunes. Find your 
device (easiest is to use Control+F to go to the search box, then tab a few 
times, it should be right after the “More” radio button).

2.            Tab or use F6 until you get to the treeview which starts with 
“Summary”. F6 probably gets you there if you press it 3 or so times.

3.            Arrow down to “Tones”, typing “T O” should get you there right 
away.

4.            Tab past all the read only stuff until you get to “Sync Tones” 
and make sure the checkbox is checked.

5.            Tab a couple more times, you will have 2 controls/options: “Sync 
all tones” and one tab more “Sync selected tones”. Check the one you want.

If you check to sync all tones then you can just tab to the “Apply” button or 
go to the file menu, arrow to Devices (use v for the shortcut) and then select  
to sync.

If you check to sync selected tones you have to tab into the list view of all 
your tones, arrow down through them and check the ones you want, then go to 
Apply or sync.

 

 

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Christopher (CJ)
Chaltain at Gmail

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