HydrogenAudio

Lossless Audio Compression => FLAC => Topic started by: Rhayader on 2012-10-24 03:23:53

Title: How to separate one track into two?
Post by: Rhayader on 2012-10-24 03:23:53
Hello, I am new here.

I have a file that contains 2 songs and I want to separate them. How can I do it?

And where can I learn about this technical audio stuff that people talk in the forums?
Title: How to separate one track into two?
Post by: db1989 on 2012-10-24 03:48:53
I can think of one piece of information that is conspicuous by its absence and is essential for people to be able to help: What kind of file? That is, what is its format? WAV, MP3, M4A/AAC, something else?

As for definitions, learning, etc.: Hydrogenaudio has a wiki (http://wiki.hydrogenaudio.org/index.php?title=Main_Page), Wikipedia will have articles on lots of topics, and you might want to search for a general primer on Google with a query such as introduction to digital audio or similar. If this does not seem specific enough, then once again, without you providing any specificity, it is effectively impossible to provide an answer with any of its own.
Title: How to separate one track into two?
Post by: Rhayader on 2012-10-24 11:40:26
Sorry, I forgot to say which kind of file. It is FLAC.
Title: How to separate one track into two?
Post by: nu774 on 2012-10-24 13:01:24
Sorry, I forgot to say which kind of file. It is FLAC.

Of course FLAC, since you are writing to the FLAC forum... 
Anyway,  quick googling will bring you to http://www.hydrogenaudio.org/forums/index....showtopic=78942 (http://www.hydrogenaudio.org/forums/index.php?showtopic=78942)
Title: How to separate one track into two?
Post by: db1989 on 2012-10-24 13:27:09
Of course FLAC, since you are writing to the FLAC forum...
I asked because it was originally posted in General Audio, then I moved it here once that was answered

In summary, you will have to de- and re-encode; this is normal, does not affect quality at all, and can be made very easy using various utilities. (Definitely do not use Medieval Cue Splitter, in any case: it basically breaks files when splitting.)
Title: How to separate one track into two?
Post by: nu774 on 2012-10-24 13:30:09
I asked because it was originally posted in General Audio, then I moved it here once that was answered

Ah, thanks. I totally missed what's going on. 
Title: How to separate one track into two?
Post by: Dynamic on 2012-10-27 01:05:19
And where can I learn about this technical audio stuff that people talk in the forums?


http://www.xiph.org/video/vid1.shtml (http://www.xiph.org/video/vid1.shtml) by Monty of xiph.org is pretty helpful for some basics of digital audio.

I can also recommend Matt Mayfield's (youtube user LoudnessWar) audio fundamentals course:
http://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLF323DDC21E6DC960 (http://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLF323DDC21E6DC960)
Note that Youtube sound is a bit poor on low resolution video, but better on higher resolution.

Wikipedia and the Wiki/Knowledgebase here are helpful and mostly provide enough linked terms for interesting background reading.

In times past I learned quite a lot from reading the cooledit96 shareware help files, though I found it on oldversion.com or something and the help doesn't work under Windows7, it seems.

The other idea is to search a Wiki when you find a term you don't know on the forums and that will often lead you into learning.
Title: How to separate one track into two?
Post by: nastea on 2012-10-27 02:38:52
Hello, I am new here.

I have a file that contains 2 songs and I want to separate them. How can I do it?



I didn't see an answer for your first question so this might be helpful:

Decode the flac file to wav, open it in a wave editor like Cool Edit Pro, select the first song, save this part using "save selection as" and do the same with the second song.

You end up with 2 files which you can (of course) encode back to flac.
Title: How to separate one track into two?
Post by: eahm on 2012-10-27 03:35:25
Audacity can do that easily and with the FLAC directly: http://audacity.sourceforge.net/ (http://audacity.sourceforge.net/)