This wikiHow teaches you how to create and install a custom ringtone from a song on your iPhone using iTunes on your iPhone, PC, or Mac. If you're using macOS Catalina or later, you'll actually be using the Music app. You can also create a custom ringtone from a GarageBand project on your Mac. You can easily create a ringtone from most music file types, including M4As and MP3s, as long as it's saved to your computer. Once you've added the song's ringtone to your iPhone, you can set it as the phone's default ringtone or as the ringtone for a specific contact.

Welcome to the latest edition of Pitchfork's Guest List. Each week, we ask one of our favorite artists to fill us in on what they've been up to lately: which tracks they can't stop spinning, what books they can't put down, and what new bands they've caught on tour. This week it's Comedian of Comedy Patton Oswalt, who talks about his admiration for the nerdy Hot Chip, endorses a rather un-nerdy television show, and psychoanalyzes the "clever" ringtone craze.

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Los Angeles Song Ringtone Download


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TV on the Radio: "Wolf Like Me"

I just keep playing that like I'm a fucking teenage girl listening to a new Duran Duran song over and over again. They're hitting my reflex, you know what I mean, and it's one of those songs that I've got to stop myself from getting in peoples' faces about: "He's like a werewolf, right, you see what he's saying!?" Ugh, that's how good that is.

For some reason I've really gotten into Merle Haggard, because-- I know this sounds really clich-- but it's these two-minute songs, and they're all really fucking punk. They're really just: "I'm singing about what an asshole I am, and I'm really unrepentant about it." Oh my God, he's so fucking good.

The Alarm Clocks: "No Reason to Complain"

I'm really into 1960s pre-punk garage bands, so the Alarm Clocks finally put out a complete collection-- one of my favorite songs is "No Reason to Complain" by the Alarm Clocks-- they put out a collection of all their stuff, what little they cut. They were all teenagers in Parma, Ohio, for God's sake, doing basically pre-punk stuff.

The Darling Buds: "It Makes No Difference"

And also a really, really underrated album from the early 90s-- and I think they kind of got swept away with Alaska and Veruca Salt and all that kind of moody stuff-- it was, like, a pop band trying to be grunge-- a band called the Darling Buds, a very fun British band who tried to go grunge with a song called "It Makes No Difference". But there was another group that I thought really did a good job; it was a British group called Lush, and they have an album called * Spooky * that I think is really underrated. I can't believe it hasn't been ripped off for more soundtrack chase scenes.

Probably * Children of Nuggets * , the box set, because I love the * Nuggets * collection and this one bridges the gap between when the 60s * Nuggets * era ended and made its way to the 70s and 80s and kind of re-flourished. It's like a great final chapter to the * Nuggets * box set. As a music nerd, normally I just get box sets and I'll keep the CDs and throw away the booklets and the boxes because they're always fucking pointless, but the book that comes with it is so good. They're so well-written and fascinating; like, in the British one there's a group called the Downliners Sect and they have a song called "Why Don't You Smile Now", and it's a great tune, you're like, "wow, this sounds really good" and then you look at the songwriting credits and it's written by Reed and Cale, and when they were struggling songwriters they sold a song to some British group. And you listen to the lyrics and you realize that Lou Reed's singing style so comes out of his word choice, because if you listen to this group, the guy's singing like Lou Reed but he doesn't know who the fuck Lou Reed is. This is just some songwriter from America-- he probably never met him-- but it's the word choice that brings out that flat, kind of homicide detective describing a case, like, that's kind of how he sings. And it's fascinating.

"Friday Night Lights" is so fucking good! Oh my God, when that show came out I was like, "Football in Texas? Pass!" And all these people that I respect all came to me with the same thing like "Dude, this is going to sound really weird, but one of the best shows on TV right now is 'Friday Night Lights'." God damn. It looks like a show that should be on HBO. It's so complex and grey-area and unforgiving and nothing's ever resolved, everyone's good and evil, the stories are really complicated. They really capture-- you think it's just about jocks and high school, but it's like a novel. It's so rich, and they start off the first episode just about a football game, the homecoming game and the team, and then as the season goes on they just keep expanding wider and wider and wider and taking in more of this town and more of the people in it, and you realize it's just about middle America. Someone described it really well: it's not about, "Hey, America is great," and waving the flag and playing a Toby Keith song; it's about, "Please tell us we we're not the ones who did Abu Ghraib. Please tell us that, because we really want to believe in our country but things are testing our belief all the time." I can't stress to you how good that show is

Just the standard ring. I don't-- man, fuck that ringtone shit! You know what that is, that's another sad, desperate way for people with no personality to express their personality. It's like the guy wearing the ironic t-shirt or the guy that walks around with a parrot on his shoulder or uses a walking stick, like, "look how interesting!" You know what I use to express my personality? * My personality! * "Look at the fucked up, beat up car I drive." Yeah, that's great, you know what? You're boring!

With texting now more common than calling for many people, and many now using VoiP services instead of cellular calls, you may not hear your iPhone's ringtone nearly as often as you used to. Still, when your phone does ring, it's nice to hear something a bit more unique than the default ringtone that everybody else is using. For one thing, it helps you know that it's your iPhone that's actually receiving a call, but it's also a nice way to express your own style.

Although the iPhone 14 comes with a selection of nearly 30 built-in ringtones to choose from, with hundreds of millions of iPhones in the world there's a good chances are you've heard them all before somewhere. Thankfully, if you're hoping for a little more originality, there's a better way to go.

The simplest way to get a new ringtone for your iPhone is to buy one from the iTunes Store directly on your device. That will set you back between $1 and $1.29 per track, though, so it's hardly the cheapest option. Nevertheless, if there's a song in Apple's collection that you're just dying to have as a ringtone, it's a really easy one-click solution that just works.

This means that the steps for creating a ringtone are essentially the same whether the app you're using is named "iTunes" or "Music," although some of the menu options differ slightly between the Windows and Mac apps.

Step 3: Once the download completes (if applicable), right-click or control-click the song you want and select Song Info (Windows) or Get Info (Mac) from the resulting drop-down list.

Step 11: Copy the new, shorter version of your song from iTunes or Music to your Desktop or another location by dragging it from the iTunes/Music window and dropping it into the appropriate spot in Finder or Windows Explorer.

Note that in some earlier versions of iTunes you may need to expand your iPhone first in the sidebar by clicking on the triangle to the left of it and then drag your ringtone directly into the Tones section.

If you'd rather create your ringtone directly on your iPhone, Apple's free GarageBand for iOS is the best way to go. Use it to trim your favorite part of a song and set it as your default ringtone. Before you get started, be sure to install the mobile GarageBand app from the App Store on an iPhone running iOS 11 or later.

Launch the GarageBand app and find the song you want to use. It's best to have the music track on your iPhone already. If you haven't already shortened it to 30 seconds, GarageBand will do that automatically, though it may not be the 30 seconds you want.

Now it's time to use your new ringtone. Note that in addition to using your new ringtone for calls, you can also set it as an alert tone for new voicemails, incoming text messages, emails, calendar alerts, and reminder alerts. You can even use a custom ringtone to replace the "swoosh" sound you hear when sending messages in Apple Mail.

Note that you can only use custom ringtones for Apple's own built-in apps like Messages, Mail, Calendar, and Reminders. Third-party apps like Facebook, Twitter, and Gmail all have their own sounds that can't be overridden in your iPhone's system-wide settings. Some third-party developers may let you use your own alert sounds, but that's entirely up to them.

Step 4: If you've selected ringtones, your list of custom tones will be grouped alphabetically at the top of the screen, followed by Apple's built-in ringtones and alert tones. When viewing tones for alerts, such as Text Tone and New Voicemail, this will be reversed, with built-in alert tones shown at the top, followed by your custom tones, and then Apple's ringtones at the bottom.

Ringtones are very small, so you don't need to worry about them taking up too much space on your iPhone. However, if you've installed a custom ringtone you no longer want cluttering up your ringtone list, you can remove it from there directly on your iPhone. Here's how.

Step 4: Locate the custom ringtone you'd like to remove, and swipe from right to left to reveal the Delete button. Select Delete or continue swiping to erase the ringtone from your iPhone.

Note that there's no confirmation prompt here, so make sure the ringtone you're removing is the right one. If you remove a ringtone that you purchased from the iTunes Store, you can recover it by using the Download All Purchased Tones option at the top of the screen. Ringtones that you created yourself will need to be restored from their original files via iTunes, Music, or GarageBand. 9af72c28ce

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