Using a flash drive to store songs is an underappreciated way to mobilize your music. You can use a USB drive to share music with your friends or transfer songs between your desktop and laptop. Many modern car stereo systems also support direct music playback from a flash drive, which can come in handy when your phone battery is low. If you're a musician, you can even use a custom USB drive to release your new album in your favorite lossless format, along with some cool digital bonuses.

Transferring music to a flash drive differs depending on your operating system. If you have one of the latest Windows versions, continue reading the Windows Instructions section. If you use a Mac, skip the Windows Instructions section, and go straight to the Mac Instructions.


How To Download Mp3 Music To Flash Drive


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Start by inserting your flash drive into an available USB port in your Windows computer. When Windows detects the drive, it will immediately play the default sound and display an AutoPlay popup window showing the letter Windows has assigned your drive, usually (D:) or (E:), and some options to work with it.

Open a File Explorer window from the AutoPlay popup or Start menu, and go to your flash drive's root folder. Here, you can see if the drive already has files and how much free space is available. Leave this window open in the background for now.

Open another File Explorer window, and navigate to the folder where you keep your music. Select the files or folders you want to copy to the flash drive. You can hold Ctrl while you click to select multiple files or folders or use Ctrl + A to select all the files and folders in the directory at once. Make sure the total size of your selected items is less than the free space available on your flash drive.

To get the selected files to your flash drive, you can copy and paste them or click and drag them from one File Explorer window to the other. One helpful tip is to right-click on the files you selected, click Send To in the menu that pops up, and then select your flash drive from the dropdown menu to automatically send them over.

Once the transfer is complete, another helpful tip is to right-click on your USB drive in File Explorer and select Eject from the popup menu before removing the drive. This will make sure all files are properly transferred and minimize the possibility of data corruption.

Find an empty USB port on your Mac, and plug in your USB drive. An icon representing the drive should appear on the right of your desktop. Click on the icon to open your flash drive in Finder. Leave that Finder window while selecting the music you want to transfer.

If you're comfortable with the iTunes interface, open iTunes, and select all the songs and albums in your library that you want to put on the flash drive. You can select all your music at once using CMD + A or hold down CMD while clicking to select multiple songs and albums.

Once you have all the necessary items selected in iTunes or Finder, click and hold on to your selection, and then drag the selection over to the first Finder window displaying your flash drive. You can also use CMD + C to copy the selection to your clipboard, and then go to your flash drive's Finder window and press CMD + V to paste the clipboard's contents to the flash drive.

When sharing high-quality music, it's crucial to use a high-quality flash drive, like what we offer at USB Memory Direct. USB 3.0 drives are quicker and have the best quality than older models, and USB-C drives are the highest-quality available, although they're still a bit expensive.

If you want the recipient to remember you, you can put your music on our custom flash drives. These come with a lifetime warranty and free shipping to the U.S. and Canada. You can get a fun variety of exterior and interior customization options, including printing or engraving the surface on both sides with your logo, art, or text in color.

You can play back high-resolution audio format files by connecting a USB flash drive of Hi-Speed USB standard or more, to the USB A port (A). For details on file formats, refer to the operating instructions supplied with your USB flash drive.

I Have exactly the same problem. It plays the music as if its skipping through it on my car stereo and even if I copy it to the storage in the car stereo, its still skipping through the music. Now before anyone jumps down my throat and says its the car stereo, its definately not.

The audio files play perfectly when I play them from source i.e. from the folder on my PC. As soon as they are copied to the thumb drive they play fast forward (skipping) on any device I plug the thumb drive into. If I transfer them to another thumb drive that ISNT a sandisk they play perfectly. The problem is with the thumb drive NOT the files NOT the PC.

The contacts on a USB 3 device are different than the contacts on a USB 2 device. It is possible I suppose that one of the contact points, on the USB drive and on the USB port could need a brief cleaning. Oxidation, smoke, dust could cause a problem.

Me: When do you expect for it to be available?

Jennifer G.: We expect to have stock in 2 weeks that will work with your car stereo. At this time we can offer to notify you when stock is available for exchange or you can return the drive to the place of purchase.

 Me: How do I know if I am getting the newer version, or the same defective version?

The program recommended here is an editor that works directly on the directory in which your files are listed, and it ignores any sorting that has been applied by Windows (which is always cosmetic. I think it makes my AV concerned (it is, after all, operating at quite a low level on a drive, which is the sort of thing that tends to concern AV software!) but it works very well.

Do you understand playlists? m3u file. A playlist acts like a list or mini script that tells most digital audio players what order you want your playback. You make them using your favorite playlist program, honestly just google for one and mess with it. Find one you like and use it. The playlist program scans your song list, you drag and drop to the playlist in the order you want then save the playlist to the same USB drive. Plug it into your player and it SHOULD offer to play the playlist.

I have a network receiver (Yamaha R-N602) where I play music from a flash drive. I've been using a 3 year old Toshiba USB 2.0 drive which sounds okay but not great. I thought I'd try a SanDisk Ultra USB 3.0 drive I was using in my car and I thought it sounded quite different. The sound was clearer but also brighter and leaner. Thinking that the higher speed drive might have better sound quality I bought a SanDisk Ultra Fit which is rated at 150Mbps vs the Ultra's 100Mbps. I find the Ultra Fit to be a more balanced sound, not bright, warmish, with better bass (also has the same sonic difference in the car).

Another consideration is power usage. I was reading that SSD drives draw more power than a USB flash drive. Should I be optimising for speed which might indicate better tolerances, or optimising for power usage which might indicate lower noise on the power lines?

Been there, done that. The extreme low latency of a class 10 SDXC card will beat the pants off an ordinary SD card or SSD drive when it comes to clarity and transient details. I'm only using the SSD drives in my NAS as backup, all music play is from a 512gb SanDisk Extreme Pro USB3 attached to NAS. I found this true of streaming or direct attached drive, the difference being cleaner sound with a network drive using optical connection vs a Wireworld Starlight cable direct connection

First impressions compared to the SanDisk Extreme 64GB USB drive is that the sound is a bit more balanced. The USB drive seemed to focus on the top end a bit which could be a bit fatiguing, whereas the SD card with Lexar reader toned down the top end, and the overall sound was a tad warmer.

I still felt that the USB drive had an edge in one or two areas. In overall instrument separation and detail the USB drive sounded slightly better. The SD card sounded slightly muddier in the midrange. I also felt that the USB drive communicated the emotion of the music better. Having said that, overall the SD card probably sounded better.

I then swapped the USB 3.0 cable which came with Lexar SR2 with a 2ft AudioQuest Forest USB 2.0 cable. The midrange came further forward and was better at communicating emotion. The music felt slower again and also quieter, I needed to turn the volume up 1dB. It's worth restating the AudioQuest cable made a significant difference to the sound.

Up to this point I thought the SD card had less prominent highs than the USB drive. The SD card was perhaps a little too subdued and the USB drive a little to edgy. However, I did miss some of the vibrance and connection with the music that the USB drive provided.

Even though the USB drive/Jitterbug combo doesn't have all of the audiophile characteristics of the SD card, at the moment I think it has the overall best balance of sound for enjoyability. I also tried both in the car and came to the same conclusion. The SD card has a very low noise floor (lower than the USB drive), and the Jitterbug helps lower the noise floor in the USB drive. The USB drive seems have a cleaner midrange than the SD card.

I was reading on Anandtech that both the SanDisk Extreme and Extreme Pro USB flash drives contain a USB to SATA controller, making them more like an SSD drive than a USB flash. There is definitely a large step up in sound with the SanDisk Extreme drive over the SanDisk Ultra.

Hello, all!

I just got a lightning to USB adapter in hopes of being able to play my large collection of mp3s from a flash drive on my iPhone 6s Plus.

It works, but I have the files on the usb organized as folders by artist, then sub folders for each album, then individual files for each song.

The files can be opened and played using the native files app, but only one at a time. Is there a way to select all the files at once so they are played one after the other?

I have tried several MP3 player apps, but none of them showed a directory with the usb drive - they all seemed geared to use with various cloud services.

Any ideas?

Thanks in advance for your help! e24fc04721

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