Here is the link to the audio I ripped from the Project Angel Food Official video:
tinyurl.com/ya9a2fmbNote that there is a folder for audio and one for video. The video file contains 2 video files extracted from YouTube in 720p MP4 format. One video is the full 28 minute tribute and the other video is just the 15 minute Adam performance.
The audio folder contains 2 folders, one with audio in M4A format and the other in MP3 format. Note that the M4A audio is ripped directly from the MP4 video and is how YouTube stores the audio on its site. This is the BEST possible quality audio that anyone can extract from the YouTube site. The MP3 audio was created by converting the M4A files to MP3 files in iTunes. YouTube does not store audio in MP3 format, so it has to be converted from the M4A format.
I added metadata tags to the audio so that it shows up nicely in smartphone apps, VLC Media Player, iTunes, and other audio players. I think I even FINALLY even got all "Angle" changed to "Angel" everywhere (obviously, I am into Math!).
The audio folders contain 4 files. The first 3 files are the individual songs cut from the full audio. The 4th file is the full audio of just Adam's performance in 1 file. When you copy the full audio folder to a smartphone or PC, audio players will see the full audio file as the 4th song in the album.
I included both image files in each audio folder. If you want to change which image file the audio is using for album artwork, you can change it in iTunes, Mp3tag (free program), or other software.
Technical Note for those who want to know:
M4A and MP3 are both "lossy" formats, i.e., when you convert to one of these formats, you lose quality. Even though the MP3 files have a higher bit rate, it is LOWER quality audio because you can only lose quality going from M4A to MP3. There is always a loss of quality going from one lossy format to another lossy format. FLAC audio is a "lossless" format, i.e., you do not lose quality converting audio to the FLAC format. However, converting from a lossy format to a lossless format does not gain any quality, it just produces a bigger file. So, I did not make a FLAC version of the audio because it would only be the exact same quality as the M4A audio but the files would be 5 times as big. The folks who record high quality audio at concerts typically record in WAV format, another lossless format that is very big. We then convert the WAV files to FLAC files without any loss in quality (one lossless format to another lossless format) but the FLAC files are a good bit smaller than the WAV files, usually almost half the size.
The Youtube video should be 1080p.. not 720p.. it's about 600MB for the 29 minutes program.