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nabeelr
Participant
January 24, 2021
Answered

Adding Chapter markers to AAC audio file for a podcast

  • January 24, 2021
  • 1 reply
  • 2283 views

Hey all!

On macOS in Garageband/iTunes, you used to be able to add chapter markers to AAC/M4A audio files so, if releasing something like a podcast, you can put different album artwork up, different titles, and have it all tied to different time indexes, as well as the ability to jump to different secions of the audio, and get a list of all the chapte

How can you do this in Adobe Audition? I don't have a Mac anymore, so I need to be able to do it in Windows.

This topic has been closed for replies.
Correct answer SteveG_AudioMasters_

I'm afraid you can't do this in Audition. M4A was always an Apple thing, and they unceremoniously dropped Quicktime for Windows, which I believe may have included options for this. In Audacity you can save M4A but I don't believe it gives you any of the other options. But as it stands, Audition does not support MPEG4 or any of its subsidiary parts at all. I had a look at Media Encoder and that doesn't either.

1 reply

SteveG_AudioMasters_
Community Expert
SteveG_AudioMasters_Community ExpertCorrect answer
Community Expert
January 25, 2021

I'm afraid you can't do this in Audition. M4A was always an Apple thing, and they unceremoniously dropped Quicktime for Windows, which I believe may have included options for this. In Audacity you can save M4A but I don't believe it gives you any of the other options. But as it stands, Audition does not support MPEG4 or any of its subsidiary parts at all. I had a look at Media Encoder and that doesn't either.

nabeelr
nabeelrAuthor
Participant
January 25, 2021

Thanks for the response Steve!
Damn, that really sucks.
Where is the best place to put in a feature request for this? Ideally in a place where Adobe will actually look at it and take it seriously, instead of just going into a general pool along with the people who think Audition should make pancakes too.

SteveG_AudioMasters_
Community Expert
Community Expert
January 25, 2021

I think you will find that this is not something Adobe can fix - it's a proprietary format and they are beholden to Apple, who are the registration authority for MP4. And as I mentioned, Apple have formally dropped Quicktime support for Windows, which is what is required as a basis to do this.

 

So basically, due to Apple protectionism, this won't be happening, I'm afraid. No amount of requests will get you anywhere until Apple changes its mind. Don't hold your breath.