Ok, so I've encountered another problem....apparently when Audacity saves the files as, in my case, wav, it rounds up to the next second, creating silence at the end of the track. With the concert I'm editing to create tracks, there are silences which ruin the performance a bit. Are there any preferences where this silence at the end can be removed so it will not be present next time I save a file?
The easiest way is to look for large gaps, and zoom out if need be. It's pretty obvious advice but get those out, save it as another WAV file and then edit away at the new file, once you've made a read-only copy.
About making MP4 quality better, have a look through the options of the software (Max Media) and see if there's any options to up the quality or VBR rate. There should be, unless it's shareware or bloatware that won't let you change anything because you need to pay a ransom fee, or else. Remember - crap in, crap out. If the original source is gutted, then the new source is going to likely be gutted too.
It does look pretty cool, I hate looking like the rest with the default icons and black background! For the backgrounds and icons and whatever else: http://www.quickpwn.com/ to get it like that. I used blank applications in the middle without names or icons, the icons are from a (RED) theme, and the backgrounds are just from a quick Google search. It's nothing special when you see what others are doing, like putting the weather on the lock screen or videos in the background.
If you want to try it by all means give it a go, but be prepared to spend a while fixing various problems you may come across like restoring it which you may well have to do. And - it's all compatible with the App Store and iTunes, which makes it even better.
Currently on my main screen is: Music (default), Settings (default), Winterboard (themes), Poof (hiding apps) and Cydia (installing apps). Still, there is some stuff nobody has been able to achieve after a year or so - custom equalizer settings comes to mind, because nobody knows where the file is to modify. But there is an app for 3D depth, which increases the depth of the sound much more than you'd be able to by default.
If you're interested, let me know. It's a bit daunting at first, but not hard.
The following aren't mine, but some great examples of what can be done - liking the first one.



