Submit Hint Search The Forums LinksStatsPollsHeadlinesRSS
14,000 hints and counting!


Click here to return to the 'MP3 editing' hint
The following comments are owned by whoever posted them. This site is not responsible for what they say.
MP3 editing
Authored by: Azark on Jan 17, '05 12:48:57PM

Audion can edit mp3s directly, without converting them first.
When I looked after an app to do this a few month ago, I didn't find many and Audion was the best anyway.

---
iMac G5 1GB SD 10.3.7 /
G4 400 AGP 768MB 10.3.7 /
G4 400 AGP 768MB OSX Server 10.3.7



[ Reply to This | # ]
MP3 editing
Authored by: rexroof on Jan 17, '05 05:38:58PM

I really like Audacity for editing mp3s.
http://audacity.sourceforge.net/



[ Reply to This | # ]
MP3 editing - Don't Do It!
Authored by: gidds on Jan 18, '05 08:34:14AM
Without converting?  It's not clear from the docs, but what I suspect it's doing is converting behind the scenes — doing the decompression and then recompression for you automatically.

In which case, every time you edit, that recompression will lose more sound quality.

In general, editing MP3s is a Bad Idea™ — far better to do all your edits in uncompressed form (WAV or AIFF) if you can, and only compress to MP3 once you're done.

Alternatively, there are apps (e.g. MP3Trimmer) which can do very limited edits to an MP3 file without de/recompressing, but that's limited to splitting, joining, and fading.

Audion looks flash, but for serious editing tasks, I use a shareware editor called Amadeus.  It doesn't try to be a player or a ripper, but concentrates on editing, and does it really well: simple to use, but really powerful.  I use for everything from tidying up radio recordings to sequencing and blending CD compilations to editing and mastering my own concert CDs.  Some of its more advanced features (noise reduction, restoration, timestretching, &c) rival or beat those in professional packages.  Well worth a look.  (Disclaimer: just a satisfied user.)

---
Andy/

[ Reply to This | # ]