ITunes Feezes while "Determining Song Volume"

I downloaded a series of podcasts (35) as usual. When downloading stopped iTunes beagn "detrmining Song Volume" which generally is only seen when nothing is playing. It normally takes a few seconds depending on number of downloads. It froze after 3-4 podacsts. It would not close. ContAltDel idicated program notb responding and "end task" took some time. This happened a number of times. I went to Grogram Add?delete and ran"repair PGM". It repeated same sequence and I closed by "end Task". I downloaded iTunes from Apple website and the same thing occurred. What now?

I have the same issue. I deleted the track manually that iTunes was attempting to determine the volume of, but that doesn't help.
I have force-restart my computer every time.

Similar Messages

  • FIX - iTunes Crash while "Determining Song Volume"

    I figured out how to make iTunes stop crashing on "Determining Song Volume". This may not fix it for everybody, but if you have a Dual-Core processor, it's worth a try.
    iTunes' SoundCheck scanning process (aka determining song volume) is not fully thread-safe. When it's trying to scan several songs, it launches each one in a separate thread. On a dual-core or dual-processor machine, this means that the scans happen simultaneously. My guess is that the decoding/scanning is perfectly fine, but the bit where it's writing the updated information into iTunes database is not. And so it eventually hits a case where both threads try to write at the same instant and bam, crash. Probably because a lack of mutex locking on the database routines.
    Anyway, if you're experiencing this problem, and have dual-cores, try this:
    1. Start iTunes. If it starts scanning immediately, hit the X icon to the right of where it says "determining song volume" to make it stop and not crash.
    2. Go to preferences and turn off SoundCheck. Also turn off "Use soundcheck when burning CDs" or something like that.
    3. Open the Task Manager (CTRL-SHIFT-ESC). Click the Processes Tab.
    4. Right click on the iTunes.exe process, and select "Set Affinity..."
    5. You should have checkmarks beside CPU0 and CPU1. Turn off the CPU1 checkmark.
    6. Back in iTunes, turn on SoundCheck again. It'll start determining song volume, and this time, it should not crash.
    If this works for you, then you can make it semi-permanent with this little program: http://www.activeplus.com/us/freeware/runfirst/
    It's called RunFirst.exe and what you do is to put a copy of it in the iTunes directory. Then change the shortcut you use to start iTunes to have the full path to runfirst.exe followed by the normal path to iTunes.exe. SO change the shortcut's properties to look like this:
    "C:\Program Files\iTunes\RunFirst.exe" "C:\Program Files\iTunes\iTunes.exe"
    This makes the shortcut launch RunFirst, which launches iTunes with the CPU Affinity forced to one core only.
    That should fix it for a lot of people. It worked for me. So enjoy!
    Apple can fix this in future revisions of iTunes, if somebody tells them to check that all the bits are totally thread-safe, because clearly that's where the issue lies.

    Sarah: Sound Check (and other volume leveling schemes) usually do lower the volume. There's lot of good technical reasons for this, but the basic gist of it is that songs which are too loud cause distortion. If you want louder music, your best bet is to leave the Sound Check on and crack up the volume knob on the speakers instead. Most audio sources are actually too loud to begin with, because people think loud = better, but this ruins the dynamic range and you don't get the full effect of the audio. CD's really would sound just as good as live performances if it were not for this.
    Sound Check doesn't actually change the song's volume itself. It just inserts a tag saying what the volume of the song is. On playback, the volume is auto adjusted to conform to an optimum level. ReplayGain works in much the same way, but it is much more precise. But anyway, turning off the Sound Check option really does turn the effect off. Sound Check doesn't permenantly change the music to begin with.
    My suggestion is to not use the volume slider on the computer, but to leave Sound Check on, and to instead simply turn up the volume on the speakers. Using the speaker volume won't distort the music in the same way that using a volume slider on the computer will. I could explain why, but it's really technical, having to do with amps and dynamic range and so forth. You're probably not that interested.
    But if you are interested, go over to the HydrogenAudio forums and start reading. More technical gibberish there than you can shake a stick at.

  • ITune crashes while determining song volume

    After I told iTune to import new songs, it started to determine the song volume. After about 300 or so songs (out of about 2000) it just crashes and ask me to send a report. When I restart it it just starts to determine the song volumes and crashes again after about the same number of songs. Any suggestions how to correct this problem?

    Well, yes, as Spock says, "Live Long and Prosper!.
    Using Spotlight, I tracked down anything that vaguely had to do with iTunes, everywhere I could find them and mercilessly deleted them. I also renamed the iTunes Music Folder and moved it to the desktop. I then took my 'old" iLife 6 CD and reinstalled everything. I refused any updates. I then opened iTunes, in preferences/playback I made sure Sound Check was checked and then clicked "add to library and added chunks of about 100 to 250 songs at a time until I got them all in. There were no problems. I suspect that some buffer get overloaded.
    Nick

  • ITunes 8.01 Crashes while "Determining Song Volume"

    Any fix for this? This happens every time I open iTunes.

    It seems most likely taht one of your files is upsetting iTunes, although this is more commonly seen with Gapless playback calculations.
    I guess you have checked the sound check checkbox in your playback preferences. I am not sure if unchecking would make any difference.
    But I think you will probably need to check your content files for problems. The following article on troubleshooting crashes includes instructions for doing this, although it is aimed at gapless playback.
    http://support.apple.com/kb/TS1717

  • Determining song volume

    I have the latest version of iTunes for Windows Vista, and when I download a song, or play a song, the info bar at the top runs a process called "determining song volume". when ever that runs, iTunes stops working, and shuts down. then Vista loads a help page, and tells me to get a download that fixes this problem, but the link takes me to download the newest version of iTunes (which I already have). can anyone offer any help?

    You need to disable the Sound Check function, which makes all the songs play at the same level. This is probably taking too much memory, and then crashing iTunes.
    Sound Check can be disabled in Preferences > Playback Tab > untick "Sound Check" > OK.
    This should fix your problem.
    Mitch

  • What is "Determining Song Volume?"

    And why does it take so long?
    I want to update a restored iPod on iTunes 7, but it's spending forever going through 4,000 some songes to "Determine Song Volume." I have not seen iTunes do that before.
    Is there a way to make it stop?
    iMac G5   Mac OS X (10.4.7)  

    iTunes "determins song volume" so that it can play back all songs with about the same volume. To do this is it has to go through all your music and determin the volume of each song.
    You probably never noticed this before since it is quite fast doing just a few songs at a time (the way most of us add music to our libraries). Unfortunately iTunes 7 aparently goes through all songs and determins the volume again (probably becuase there was a problem with this is some earlier versions of itunes)
    You can make it stop by turning off "soundcheck" in the playback preference pane.

  • "Determining Song Volume"... then shuts down

    I just bought a new computer with Vista, imported my library from my external hard drive (which I used to store all my music for my old computer) and my itunes shuts down after "Determining Song Volume" on the first few podcats. Any suggestions??

    You need to disable the Sound Check function, which makes all the songs play at the same level. This is probably taking too much memory, and then crashing iTunes.
    Sound Check can be disabled in Preferences > Playback Tab > untick "Sound Check" > OK.
    This should fix your problem.
    Mitch

  • ITunes is automatically determining audio volume on my files

    Whenever I open iTunes it begins automatically "determining audio volume" for my podcasts. I don't know why it's doing this. When I click on the x in the window it stops, but if I close iTunes and reopen it, it starts again. How can I make iTunes stop doing this permanently?

    I have the same problem with automatically "determining song volume" every time I launch iTunes, and it's with over 40 GB of music, a real pain in the neck. I believe it might have something to do with how you import songs from a cd or how you burned a cd and reimport them. If you burn a cd with the "use soundcheck" option, this might be the culprit, but I don't know how to adjust the whole library to forget soundcheck altogether. I tried selecting all tracks, get info, and setting them all to 0 under options for volume adjustment, but that didn't work. Anyone else have any ideas?

  • Always "Determining Song Volume"

    I've just updated to iTunes 7.3 and have noticed that it seems iTunes now Determines Song Volume for Podcasts as well as tracks? Maybe it did that before? ... But it sure has dragged to a crawl for the first time ever and is really focusing on determining the song volume of the podcasts that just downloaded. Long podcasts = big files = very slow.
    I've shut off Sound Check in the preferences ... it still is Determining Song Value when I fire iTunes back up. It won't not do it ... unless I can quickly click the "x" button in the display window at the top of the app.
    Anyone else seein' this? Tips?

    Ever since updating iTunes whenever I launch it all of my songs and podcasts go through 'determining song volume' EVERY TIME!! What is up with that?
    I have deselected sound check...not sure if that will do the trick or not. But after reading the above post, I'm not hopeful.
    As I type this the VERY SLOW song volume thing drags on.................

  • Determining song volume crashes iTunes 7.7

    Hi there! I just submitted this as a bug report. Does anyone have any workarounds, or fixes? Thanks!
    After determining the volume of about 300 or so songs, Windows reports "iTunes has stopped working". No particular kind or group of files is affected - by restarting iTunes, it can usually check the volume of the song that had appeared to make it crash. However, after another 300 or so songs, it crashes again before it can finish the entire library.
    This is on the x64 edition of Windows Vista Ultimate.
    The problem details are:
    Problem signature:
    Problem Event Name: APPCRASH
    Application Name: iTunes.exe
    Application Version: 7.7.0.43
    Application Timestamp: 487517e1
    Fault Module Name: iTunes.exe
    Fault Module Version: 7.7.0.43
    Fault Module Timestamp: 487517e1
    Exception Code: c0000005
    Exception Offset: 004e9444
    OS Version: 6.0.6001.2.1.0.256.1
    Locale ID: 5129
    Additional Information 1: fd00
    Additional Information 2: ea6f5fe8924aaa756324d57f87834160
    Additional Information 3: fd00
    Additional Information 4: ea6f5fe8924aaa756324d57f87834160
    I thought I should also mention that I have tried to remedy the problem by removing all traces of iTunes and Quicktime, then reinstalling. I also tried installing Quicktime from the standalone exe. Creating a fresh user account did not help either.

    I also have the same problem. I have iTunes 8 and when it's says it determining the volume on my podcasts it stop and tells me the iTunes has stopped work. There go my 78 podcasts!!

  • 'Determining Song Volume' crashes iTunes in Vista

    Hello all. I have just purchased a new Vista machine, and all updates are installed on it. My first app to install was iTunes but when I drag & drop music into the library, iTunes crashes. This also occurs whenever I restart iTunes. I have figured out that when I disable cound check in the prefs, the issue disappears. Like I say, it's running on a clean install machine, but I've re-installed three times now with no success. Cany anyone help?!?

    I also have the same problem. I have iTunes 8 and when it's says it determining the volume on my podcasts it stop and tells me the iTunes has stopped work. There go my 78 podcasts!!

  • Why is my iTunes insisting on 'determining audio volume' every time?

    I upgraded to iTunes 9 a few weeks back and seemingly from that point onwards my iTunes application wants to 'determine audio volume' on a great number of tracks as soon as the program is launched.
    The setting is unticked in Preferences on iTunes and on the iPod I synch with.
    I don't want it to be doing this, especially as I'm quite happy to manually change this level if I feel its required, but can find no way of preventing it, aside from clicking on the 'x' in the top window whenever it starts - which is becoming tiresome.
    I've tried deleting the cache file in Library > Caches and also starting up in Safe Mode and then opening again in normal mode but all to no avail.
    Help!!!

    Make sure you have also unticked sound check in the burn settings dialog you get when you burn a playlist to disc.

  • Itunes crashes while determining  gapless playback info

    I had this problem with itunes 7 and now with 8 and its driving me crazy.
    OK i have had no issues up till a few days ago. I was listening to a podcast and it had like 9 minutes to go and it froze up itunes started having the spinning beachball and it took 5 minutes before i could even get the force quit menu to come up so i could get out of itunes.
    Then i reopened it and it said my libary was not an itunes libary so it began building one and it got half way though and it said determining gapless playback for sony 300 of whatever and it kept going it started slowing down then it picked up again then it froze. I saw which song it froze on so once i get itunes to quit i found the song and took it out. It sstarted up and this time froze on the song before it.
    So i took out everything started a blank library and added songs one folder at a time and it got part way done but then at some point it freezes up and then every since this issue with itunes now when im typing in safari or firefox if i type to fast i get the spinning beach ball and i have to wait about 10 seconds to type again.

    I am experiencing the same problem. My itunes used to freeze after several seconds of being open because certain songs would jam it on the gapless playback. However I would "X" out of this and the program would work fine. However, the first song it checks now for gampless playback jams it and as soon as i open itunes, it freezes. It does not even show that it is processing the gapless playback in the upper window. My computer also makes a "weird noise:" the hard drive turns intensely to a beat: -- -- ---- (pause of about 2 seconds) -- -- ----. I have tried reinstalling itunes, which did not work.
      Mac OS X (10.3.9)   12in Powerbook 1.33 ghz

  • TS1362 Has anyone found a fix for the ITunes stutter while playing songs in ITunes WinXp?

    I have search for days to find a solution to this problem. As long as I'm not doing any multi-tasking the songs play ok sometimes, but do anything else and the songs
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    The stutter issue hit also some Mac users.
    Somehow iTunes are computer-resources demanding to play an audio file.

  • IPod wont stop "Determining Song Volume"

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    To turn off your iPod: press and hold the "PLAY/PAUSE" button for a few seconds.
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