I have MP3 files that sometimes have silence at the end. I would like to remove this silence automatically. From what I can tell, it is "perfect" silence (0 amplitude), not background noise. The length of the content and the silence varies.
I found some other questions about cropping to the first 30 seconds or cropping to X and X+N seconds using ffmpeg
. I would think I could use a similar approach, as long as I have a way to find when the silence starts. How would I do that programatically?
For example, one possible solution would be to have a command that finds the beginning of the "silence". I'd expect a sequence like this
end=$(ffmpeg some-command-to-find-start-of-silence)
ffmpeg -t "$end" -acodec copy -i inputfile.mp3 outputfile.mp3
The solution does not have to use ffmpeg
, but it does need to be available on Ubuntu.
Have a look at the
silencedetect
FFmpeg audio filter:It has parameters to adjust how quiet something has to be to be considered silence, and how long the silence needs to be to be noted.
You probably are looking for a lossless solution, i.e. one that does not require re-encoding (which reduces quality).
I believe mp3splt is what you are looking for. It can be used from command line and GUI.
should work on Debian and Ubuntu.
From the man page:
This will trim any silence longer than 0.1 second from your file. If you're only concerned about trimming the end, this can be simplified to:
A detailed look into how
sox
'ssilence
works can be found here.