Home
My First Mac



 Help Buying and Getting
 Started with Your New Mac

How Do I Make a MP3 Ringtone in Garageband?

Quick Scan

Find your song in iTunes.

Drag it into the Garageband window.

Edit it to size.

Use "Share" to make a new MP3 file.

Send to phone via Bluetooth.

How Do I Make a MP3 Ringtone in Garageband?

So you got this awesome song in your iTunes music library, and you would like to use the very best part of it as a ringtone on you mobile phone? Well it’s not as tough as you might think!

Once again this tip is mostly written for people that have bought a themselves a new Macbook (or any other Mac model with bluetooth), or just want to easily make ringtones for use on your mobile phone.

You will need:
A Mac with bluetooth
A mobile phone with bluetooth, that supports .mp3 ringtones. Not the iPhone.
iLife 08 (if you have the 06 version, some of the instructions might not be able to follow, but i believe it can be accomplished with the 06 version as well)

The first step is to find a song you love from your iTunes music library. It could be just about any song, and it doesn’t matter if its archived as a .mp3 or .acc file.

Now starts the magic! Launch Garageband, and leave iTunes open, we are coming back to it later. After launching Garageband, the welcome screen shows up, choose “Create New Music Project”. Then give it a name (for instance “Ringtone”wink and press the “create” button.

So now we got Garageband up and running with our new project open. By default, what you will see on the screen is a virtual keyboard that you can play on (real fun, try it out some day!) and a track that is called “Grand Piano” marked in green.

First thing that we are going to do in Garageband is to get rid of the “Grand Piano” track. To do so, click on the menu “track > delete track”, or simply press the shortcut “command + backspace”.

Now you are ready for doing the trick. Open up iTunes, and simply drag the track from the iTunes window, to just about anywhere in the Garageband window (don’t close the iTunes window yet, we need it for later, minimize it). And there you go, the tune is copied from iTunes to Garageband for further editing! Your tune (the orange bar in the track named after your tune) probably isn’t at the place where you want it to be. Again use the Mac drag-n-drog simplicity, and place it where you want it (for me, thats at point zero on the ruler). Now you wanna hit the play button to make sure that it’s the right track that you imported, and also for making a last decision about where to “cut” the track.

So now what you wanna do is to fit the tune to the Garageband window, so you can se the whole tune at once. To do so, drag the slider at the bottom left corner of the screen to the left, till the tune fits into the window. Now click the menu “track > show arrange track”. This will open up a little bar just on top of your track. Now press the darkgrey plus symbol three times. By doing so you are splitting you tune up into 3 sections (untitled, untitled 1, untitled 2). You can rename these by double clicking on the name of one of the sections, and wait a tiny second, i renamed mine “cut” “tune” and “cut”.

As some of you probably guessed just before, these 3 sections are going to help us cut out our favorite part of the song. The most important section is the “tune” one. It’s gonna mark up the part of the song that we want as our final ringtone. Expand it, or make it smaller, by dragging at the left and right borders of the section. Next, cover up the rest of the track with the 2 “cut” sections, by expanding those the same way as you did with the “tune” section before.

Now click on the first “cut” section, and press backspace, that will delete the music in the section, by pressing backspace again, you delete the section completely. Do the same trick on the other “cut” section. Now press menu “share > send song to iTunes”. There will pop up a little window with forms that are already filled. Now make sure that the “Compress using:” is set to “MP3 Encoder”. Then press share.

So we are back in iTunes again, and the song will automatically start playing. This places us near at the end, since the only thing we are left to do is connect to the mobile phone, and transfer the file. Now make sure that bluetooth is running on the mobile phone, and that it’s near you.

Go open up system preferences. Under hardware, press bluetooth. Make sure that both “Bluetooth Power” and “Show Bluetooth status in the menu bar” is checked. On the left you can see a list of your devices. If you have connected to you mobile phone before it’s already there, if not press the “plus” button and the “Bluetooth Setup Assistant” will help you through the process of connecting.

Now click on the bluetooth icon, and mouse over the name of you phone. Then press “send archive”. Now type in the name of your tune (including .mp3 after the name to make the search more precise). Now click it and press the “send” button and you are done! When the transfer is complete, make sure to turn bluetooth off (unless needed) on both you Mac and your phone so that you don’t waste precious battery smile.


Have you found a great way to bring home-made ringtones to your phone? Share it with us in the Comments section below!

 
 

This button is an easy way to let readers bookmark articles on Digg, Del.icio.us, Stumbleupon, Google Bookmarks and other services with a single click. You can find out more about Social Bookmarking here.

CLOSE

 
 
 
 
 
 

CLOSE     

 
 







Your Comments:

okay everything easy peasy except the last paragragh- what "bluetooth icon?"


 Bryn
 06/17/2008  at  11:29 AM

I can't send the files in the Ringtones part of iTunes or from Garageband to my phone.


 Mere
 07/10/2008  at  07:42 PM

I'm a recent switcher and now have an iMac and was anxious to try this article's tip out, but I cannot get GarageBand 08 to import my paid-for iTunes (7.7.1) songs for ringtone making/editing. Only mp3 songs will show up in the media browser to drag and drop into GarageBand. When I try to drag and drop my paid-for iTunes songs into GarageBand it gives an error message saying that it can't import a protected file (a rights-protected AAC file.)

How do I get these songs into GarageBand?! Help!


 Deborah
 08/29/2008  at  12:31 AM

Your are the best! This article was exactly what I was looking for!


 Alex
 09/04/2008  at  05:17 AM

I got the same issues with Joey. I'm running iTunes 7.6 and Garageband 08.


 aanetio
 09/11/2008  at  05:58 AM

how do i make sure that it doesn't convert back to acc file? cause when i send to itunes it doesn't offer anything just sends it.


 Cassidy
 09/22/2008  at  01:51 AM

Cassidy, I think ringtones get their own file type. I'm not sure if it's really changed or just gets a different extension.


 Chris Kerins
 09/22/2008  at  09:08 AM

i think you need a converter just as the instruction at ringtones for a samsung


 gina
 10/17/2008  at  12:44 AM

Well, Personally, i dragged my song from limewire. it worked great

(**)_(**)
/( .) ( .)\
\ o /
//|. .|\\
// | |\\
// | . | \\
nn //\\ nn
// \\
/ / \ \
(==/ \==)


 Lachlan
 11/17/2008  at  06:39 PM

Everything worked for me but I ended up with about 10 seconds of blank track at the end of the song, is there anyway to fix this?


 Jenn
 12/25/2008  at  07:25 PM

Page 3 of 5 pages « First  <  1 2 3 4 5 >

Your response:

Name: Email:

Notify me of follow-up comments

Enter the word you see below:


Remember my personal information

Please keep your comments related to the topic. Personal attacks, offensive language or comments containing advertising will be deleted and you may be banned from MFM.

MFM comments are moderated. It may take a few minutes to a few hours before your comment shows up so we can verify it's not comment spam. Sorry, but we receive spammy comments all day long.

Most Popular Help Topics

Mac Link of the Day

iTunes for Mac: Moving your iTunes Media folder

Learn how to move your iTunes Media folder to a different location on your Mac.

-Apple.com

>> Archive