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#1 |
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Remove video from a music video?
Yes, I'm aware of ways to remove DRM. They are uninteresting to me.
I got an album off iTunes. One of the songs in it is a music video -- a .m4v, which contains the audio, plus the video for the music video. I like the music, but iTunes CANNOT play the sound without switching from my playlist display to a large and disruptive animation. So I want to obtain a file which contains the audio from this video. I don't care about DRM either way; I don't even know whether it's got DRM. I just want to be able to convert this to a substantially smaller file which does not produce distracting visuals whenever iTunes encounters it. Unfortunately, I haven't been able to construct search terms which yield anything on this, rather than information about removing DRM. |
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#3 |
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Or Max. Works with videos and any audio format you're likely to come across.
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Late 2011 MacBook Pro | 2.4 GHz Intel Core i7 | 16 GB RAM | 256 GB SSD + 750 GB HDD | Mac OS X 10.8.2 | Windows 7 Ultimate SP1 iPhone 5 | 32 GB | iOS 6.1 | Jailbroken | Verizon |
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#4 |
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You could just use Quicktime to export the audio only.
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#5 | |
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---------- ... That's surprisingly simple and easy. Thank you! New problem: I deleted the video from iTunes. Now I can't add the audio to iTunes, possibly because it thinks the file with that name, artist, album, etc., is supposed to be deleted or something. *sigh* EDIT: No, it's just that it gets added to the "videos" list. Because it used to be a video. So it's tagged in iTunes as "a video" even though it has no video components. Well, I can live with it showing the wrong icon and not being in the "Songs" list, as long as it works. |
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#6 |
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Garageband. When you load the movie, it should display video and audio as separate tracks. Just delete the video and Share back to iTunes.
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PPC Mini, 10.4.11, Intel Mini, 10.6.6, White MacBook 10.6.8 iPhone 3GS, using o2 PAYG |
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#7 | |
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#8 |
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What's the bit rate in that app. Which actually uses AppleScript .
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#10 |
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#11 |
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Okay. And no, I hadn't tried All2MP3 yet, because the Quicktime Player suggestion wouldn't require a separate download, and the exported audio appears to be identical to the original. So in terms of my actual original problem, QuickTime solves the original issue; it produces a thing which plays the sound and appears to be substantively identical, rather than a reconversion to a new format. (And a data point: Running either of them through All2MP3 produces a bit-for-bit identical file, so the quicktime player export is necessarily of superior quality -- it's a bit-for-bit copy.)
Not at all sure that any force on Earth will be able to convince iTunes to reconsider whether that file is a song or a video, though. It's utterly convinced that this file, which contains no video data whatsoever, is "a video". Last edited by therealseebs; Jan 9, 2013 at 06:50 PM. |
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#12 | |
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(Yes, it is by definition higher quality; it hasn't been re-encoded. Any decode-and-reencode is going to have at least some effect on quality.) |
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