If you have an mp3 of a song or a voice recording that you wish you could trim down or cut out
just the part you want, maybe you finally got around the transferring tat old mixed tape if yours
into iTunes but you want to get rid off of the gaps and silence at the end of each side. Whatever
the reason, it can be handed and exactly how to open up and edit an mp3 file.
The first thing you'll need is an audio editor that can import mp3 files. Fortunately one of our
favorite audio editors from this also happens to be free. Head over to scenenessdownload.com
and look up a program called audacity. You can get the Mac and PC. It's free and it's awesome.
We actually use it to record all of our cnet podcast. Once you have audacity installed, go to the
file menu and select import audio file.
Then find the mp3 file you want to edit. If the files in iTunes, you can also drag and drop the file
from the iTunes window and into an open audacity window. After that, you should see a way
form of the mp3 file. Using the selection tool, you can click around the file and use the play
button to preview the sound.
Once you found the part of the file that you like to delete, just highlight it and hit the delete key.
If you want to lift the section out of a longer file, you can highlight the selection. Use the copy
command from the edit menu and paste the selection into a new file. If you make a mistake, you
can always use the undo command to back out of it. Once your undo have bee made, you want to
save the result as a new audio file.
By default, audacity does not export audio of the mp3 format but there are two ways to work
around this. One solution is to sue the export command in the file menu and save the recording
as a wav file. You can then drag the file into iTunes. Select the mp3 format from the iTunes
preferences import settings and then use the advanced menu to convert the selected audio track
to an mp3.
Another solution is to give audacity the ability to export mp3s directly. To do this, you'll need to
grab the free LAME mp3 encoder extension. Don’t worry, it's not literally lame, it's just an
unfortunate acronym. Different versions of audacity have the LAME integration in different
ways.
So your best bet is to head to audacity.sourceforge.net and do a search for LAME. You should
see a tutorial page on downloading and installing the LAME encoder. After following the
instructions, the export command should offer mp3 and this list of file export options. So there
you go, that’s how to edit an mp3 file using audacity. For cnet.com, I'm Donald Bell.
Transcription by:
Scribe4you Transcription Services