There are many ways to remove DRM protection from iTunes music. On Windows OS, you can remove the DRM from iTunes music using the burn-and-rip method or you can turn to programs like
TuneClone and
DoubleTwist. On Mac OS X,
iMovie is the perfect solution to removing DRM from iTunes music. Besides, freewares like
FairGame is also a pretty good choice. So this article is dedicated to introducing several methods of removing the nasty DRM from iTunes music on Windows and Mac OS X. It is divided into the following four parts:
Part 1. Remove DRM from iTunes music on Windows with burn-and-rip method
A. Insert a CD-R or CD-RW disc into your CD-ROM drive. You’d better use CD-RW disc as it can be used for more than once.
B. Burn your playlist to make an audio CD. You cannot select the
MP3 CD option since it requires the protected music files be converted to unprotected MP3 files.
C. After the audio CD is successfully burned, insert the disc into your CD-ROM drive again. Then you can use iTunes to import the music tracks on the burned disc to MP3 files.
Part 2. Remove DRM from iTunes music on Windows with TuneClone
A. Download
TuneClone from
http://www.tuneclone.com and install it.
It is fully compatible with Windows XP and Vista. A virtual CD Burner will be installed. This virtual CD-RW will be used to convert music files.
B. Set the default CD Burner to TuneClon CD-RW at iTunes.
Click menu
Edit, select menu item
Preferences..., and then select
Advanced Tab. In order to keep the artist and title information of the music, the
Include CD Text option should be checked.
C. Create a playlist, and then add the files you want to convert into the playlist.
D. Click
Burn Disc button at the bottom right of the main screen of iTunes.
While the burning gets started, TuneClone will automatically convert the music file to MP3, WMA or WAV. You can open the manager screen to show all the converted music files.
The most important step is to choose the cd burner. Then the software can convert the music files automatically. It is exceedingly easy when you want to batch convert lots of files.
Part 3. Remove DRM from iTunes music on Mac OS X with iMovie
In the iMovie window, select the 'Media' tab located between 'Themes' and 'Editing'. You will notice that the top right portion of the interface now offers a media browser. Select the 'Audio' tab and locate the playlist which contains purchased music, or search by artist/title.
Select the DRM-laden song and drag the file from the media browser into the iMovie timeline where it says "Drag audio here to build your project."
In order to export the song, iMovie requires that a visual image be associated with the audio track -
iMovie thinks that it is going to be exporting a movie. Simply drag a blank image (or any other image) to the track above the previously imported audio file. Once iMovie has processed the image, select the 'Share…' sub menu item from found inside 'Share' in iMovie's menu bar.
Ensure that 'Expert Settings' is selected in the "Compress movie for:" drop-down menu. Selecting 'Expert Settings' mode will provide the options to export the file as an audio file. Select the 'Share' button.
In the Save as… dialogue, select "Sound to AIFF" in the Export drop-down menu, Choose an appropriate directory for iMovie to export to, title the file, and select 'Save'. Depending on your machine configuration, iMovie will compress and export the movie project as an audio file in 15-40 seconds.
Locate the exported AIFF audio file and drag to your iTunes Library. Right-click on the file and select "Convert Selection to AAC". Once completed, 'Get Info' on the new file, edit meta data, add album art, and trash the originally purchased and AIFF audio files from your iTunes library.
Part 4. Remove DRM from iTunes music on Mac OS X with FairGame
FairGame is freeware to remove DRM protection from iTunes music on Mac OS X. It will convert the DRMed songs you bought on the iTunes Store to an unprotected format (using iTunes default encoder) and keep all the original metadata, lyrics and artwork. FairGame doesn't do lossless DRM stripping. It re-encodes protected AAC files purchased in iTMS into unprotected AAC file using Apple's iMovie software.
What you MUST DO (only once) to get FairGame to work:
Enable "Access for assistive devices" in the "Universal Access" system preference
Select "Place clip in Movie Timeline" in the "Import" preference of iMovie HD
Then you can simply:
Select some songs in iTunes
Click on the "Process songs" button
Don't touch anything and wait until it's done...(FairGame is scripting iMovie's interface to process the songs, don't interfere)
1 blog comments below
I would like to recommend NoteBurner which can also convert DRM music on both Windows and Mac systeme.
Convert iTunes DRM music on Windows:
Step 1: Run NoteBurner, and click Settings button, then you can set the output as MP3, WAV or WMA
Step 2: Run iTunes 8. Create a new playlist in iTunes and add all m4p files you want to convert to this new list.
Click on the Burn Disc button and choose NoteBurner Virtual CD-RW as your default burner to burn the playlist.
Step 3: After NoteBurner finish encoding, the converted file will be automatically listed on the main window of NoteBurner.
Click Play button or double-click any song to play the music.
Click the Folder button to open the output folder, where you will find the converted MP3 files.
Convert iTunes DRM music on Mac:
Step 1: Run NoteBurner, and choose output format and output folder.
Go to the top-left NoteBurner > Preferences…
Here you can specify output path where the converted audio files will be located in,
choose the desired output format from MP3 and AAC, and set the output quality.
If you want to be alerted when there is an update, check the option of “Check Updates on Startup”.
Step 2: Run iTunes, and click menu File > New Playlist in iTunes to create a new playlist
to hold all music and audiobooks you want to burn.
Right-click on the music in music library and audiobooks in Audiobooks library to choose Add to Playlist and choose the list created.
Press Shift or Command key to add more than one file to the playlist at one time.
After adding files to playlist, click Burn Disc button to set NoteBurner as the default burner,
and then click Burn button to start burning the playlist.
Step 3: After NoteBurner finishs encoding, you can right click on the music and select “Show In Finder” to check the converted audio files in the output folder.