

Or, you can listen to the album and manually mark song track changes (splitpoints), and easily separate the whole album into song tracks manually this way, and use those manually created splitpoints to create a new ".cue" sheet. This program can let you search for and retrieve ".cue" sheets file for whole album files if they exist, save (export) those cue sheets, split the whole album file into song tracks.


ACCESSING FILEBOT SETTINGS SOFTWARE
But, while doing all the research for your post, I did come across updated versions of this software and it does handle ".flac" files now, but for some reason the newer versions are not available in the Mint repos. I thought "mp3splt" & "mp3splt-gtk" were not being updated or maintained at all, could not handle ".flac" files, and were not available for Linux Mint 18 (Ubuntu 16.04 xenial). "mp3splt-gtk" can also split whole album files into separate song tracks using available "cue" sheets.īut, What if you don't have a ".cue" sheet or "toc" table of content file with "splitpoint" information (starting and ending times based upon time duration for each song) for separating the whole album into individual song tracks? Or, what if for some reason after splitting the whole album into song tracks, there are issues, like the song tracks were not created properly, bad cue or toc files or whatever, etc.? This is where "mp3splt" will work well. If you have good ".cue" sheet files for your whole album music files, "Flacon" is definitely the best and easiest way to separate the whole album music file into song tracks. Regarding splitting whole album music files into individual song tracks.Īlthough I am very impressed with "Flacon" and its ease of use and capabilities, I thought I should mention again that "mp3splt" is also worth trying. Hi "Weeping Cookie", & Anyone Else Interested in this,
