Perhaps worth checking if those recordings are available to buy in digital format (for example from iTunes / Amazon / other).
Good point! I ALWAYS suggest that but somehow this time I ASSUMED the music wasn't available digitally.
Or, you might want to just buy digital copies of your favorites, or songs that have extremely poor quality.
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If you're concerned about quality at all...
The Click Removal Effect is automatic.
The Repair Effect is manual (you have to select the defective audio) if Click Removal doesn't remove all clicks.
Some regular Noise Reduction may help with the low-level background noise.
Wave Corrector is a FREE special-purpose automatic vinyl clean-up application.
Wave Repair ($30 USD) is a manual vinyl clean-up application. it's VERY time consuming but it only "touches" the audio where you identify a defect, and there are several different repair methods available.
Also, many older records are a little "dull" sounding. Sometimes it helps to boost the higher frequencies with the Graphic EQ effect.
And, it's usually a good idea to normalize (AKA "maximize") with the Amplify or Normalize effect before exporting. That serves two purposes - If the peaks are below 0dB it will boost the volume. If the peaks are above 0dB (which can happen with effect like EQ) they can be clipped (distorted) when you export. In that case, normalizing will bring the peaks down to 0dB to prevent clipping.
You can normalize one song at a time, or if you want to retain the
relative volume between the loud & quiet songs on the album you can make one big WAV file and normalize the whole thing at once.