Need just a part out of a whole MP3 file..

lazygarfield

Disciple
Hello,

I have an mp3 file of a song (downloaded legally ;)) but the thing is, I want to use a part of that song, just a part and it lies smack-dab in the middle of the song.

So, how can I cut out just that part? Any easy-to-use software out there? Any help?!
 
There is an app in the nero suite, i forgot the name but it does the job very easily..

EDIT:- its Nero Wave Editor: Audio authoring tool capable of recording, trimming, filtering, mixing and exporting audio.
 
eventhorizon said:
This one dosent ,..either....u can directly export to mp3.....although for first time u'll have to point it to "lame_enc.dll" file....

Just to be clear...

The ideal way to do what the OP wants is without a re-encode as that way the snippet retains the same quality as the original.

Can you confirm that Audacity does that in this particular instance ?

Reason i ask is wav editors rarely do that, they convert to wav, let you modfy and then encode (re-encode in this instance) the remainder to give you the result.

A tool i've used from ages ago for this very purpose is mp3trim. But the free version will only handle a max track duration of 7 minutes.
 
I use Jet audio player. Its a free download. It can record songs as it plays. I use those to cut a few section of songs or movie sound to use as ring tones in my mobile.

Its completely free. You have a record option... select a file to play and click on record, it gives you option to choose to the file type to save i.e wav, or mp3 and several other types. Just click on stop button when you are done. The part of the captured sound will be saved in the location chosen. I did not see any quality drop. You need not have any extra gadgets. It works perfectly fine for me and i am still using it
 
Okay...correction. Audacity, will not reproduce perfect MP3 crops.

Audacity will not edit a MP3 file. It converts the MP3 to a high quality internal format and then exports to a new MP3 when you're done. Each format change produces some damage.

From a query I raised on the Audacity Forum.
 
As i suspect a lot of other apps recommended by ppl here are ALSO doing.

Here's a simple test, disable any mp3 encoder the app uses and then try to trim your files, if the app complains something is missing, you're getting a reencode :)
 
Any sound editing software will always convert a mp3 file to wav in memory before it can do work on it. mp3 container is like a zip, you cannot work on the contents before extracting them.
 
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