How to convert .m4a audio files to .mp3 use command line?
I note that your input file is actually a Variable Bitrate (VBR) AAC file with an overall bitrate of 71.7 Kbps and a maximum bitrate of 93.8 Kbps. So you actually have two reasonable choices: encode to a Variable Bitrate MP3 file or simply decide on a suitable bitrate for Constant Bitrate (CBR) MP3 encoding. And FFmpeg is certainly the best tool for both of these!
1. Variable Bitrate (VBR) Encoding
This would be my own choice if only for the reason that the original AAC file is also a VBR file. Encoding to MP3 with a variable bitrate of 70-105 Kbps can be mapped to FFmpeg with the -q:a 8
option as below:
ffmpeg -i show.m4a -c:a libmp3lame -q:a 8 output.mp3
And I suspect that this is your best option with your input file.
2. Constant Bitrate (CBR) Encoding
Constant Bitrate (CBR) Encoding is a little over-used IMHO but if this suits your playback equipment best then it is a valid choice. Since your input file has an overall bitrate of 71.7 Kbps and a maximum bitrate of 93.8 Kbps we could perhaps fudge the numbers a little and use the following:
ffmpeg -i show.m4a -c:a libmp3lame -b:a 96k output.mp3
Some experimentation might be in order with good choices for the bitrate being taken from the following LAME 'allowable' standards: 64k, 80k, 96k, 112k. Whatever sounds best on your playback hardware...
References:
- FFmpeg MP3 Encoding Guide: FFmpeg Trac's great guide to encoding to mp3. Especially note the VBR mapping table marked 'LAME Bitrate Overview'.
You can use FFmpeg command-line version.
ffmpeg -i inputfile.m4a -acodec libmp3lame -ab 93k outputfile.mp3
In the process of converting it to MP3, always there will be some quality loss(Although it may be unnoticeable to human hearing). MP3 is a lossy format (no matter the format of the original). You can read more about lossy and lossless formats here
Give this a try:
sudo apt-get install ffmpeg
This will install the ffmpeg
package.
We can see what formats are acceptable by typing:
ffmpeg -formats
Or
ffmpeg -codecs
Navigate to the directory your audio files are in with the cd
command. If you need help finding the directory use the ls
command.
$ ls
backup.log Desktop examples.desktop Music snap
branches-tutorial Documents flick Pictures Templates
SumDocument Downloads mozilla.pdf Public Videos
Lets say my files are in the Desktop
folder. I would then type:
cd Desktop
Now I will be in the correct directory. Following, now we type:
ffmpeg -i show.m4a newFileName.mp3
To convert with a specified bitrate ( In your case it looks like 71.1Kbps with a max of 93.8Kbps - I'm not sure what will happen if trying to use the max vs the Overall bit rate, unfortunately), we run:
ffmpeg -i show.m4a -b:a 71100 newFileName.mp3
I pulled this information from https://www.howtoforge.com/tutorial/ffmpeg-audio-conversion/
Please note that conversion to a lossless codec (mp3) inevitably will lead to (not necessarily audible) quality loss.