Thursday, September 26, 2013

Extract audio track from a youtube video

Youtube is a great source for watching videos or listening to music on-line via their website. But if you want to download the video or audio to your computer, you need some special tool, and you need to know the URL for the youtube video you wish to download.

One such tool is youtube-dl, which is a python script. Unfortunately, youtube-dl is not pre-packaged with Debian Wheezy.

I downloaded the script directly from this web page:

$ sudo curl https://yt-dl.org/downloads/2013.09.24.2/youtube-dl -o /usr/local/bin/youtube-dl
$ sudo chmod a+x /usr/local/bin/youtube-dl

The syntax of youtube-dl is quite straight-forward.

To download the complete youtube video (with the soundtrack), just provide the URL of the video as a single argument.

$ youtube-dl http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=O-xlvalecI8 
[youtube] Setting language
[youtube] O-xlvalecI8: Downloading video webpage
[youtube] O-xlvalecI8: Downloading video info webpage
[youtube] O-xlvalecI8: Extracting video information
[youtube] O-xlvalecI8: Encrypted signatures detected.
[youtube] O-xlvalecI8: Downloading js player vflUKrNpT
[download] Destination: Give me oil in my lamp-O-xlvalecI8.flv
[download] 100% of 11.73MiB in 00:43

This creates a Flash Video (.flv) file in your local hard drive. To watch the video off-line, open the .flv file with a media player application such as VLC or Totem.

If it is just the sound track that you want, not the complete video, you can still use youtube-dl. However, to do audio extraction, youtube-dl requires 2 extra programs to be installed. Namely, it requires ffmpeg or avconv, and ffprobe or avprobe.

On my Debian Wheezy system, I installed avconv and avprobe by simply installing this package:

$ apt-get install libav-tools

Finally, you can run youtube-dl like this to extract the audio track only:

$ youtube-dl --extract-audio --audio-format mp3   http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=O-xlvalecI8 
[youtube] Setting language
[youtube] O-xlvalecI8: Downloading video webpage
[youtube] O-xlvalecI8: Downloading video info webpage
[youtube] O-xlvalecI8: Extracting video information
[download] Destination: Give me oil in my lamp-O-xlvalecI8.flv
[download] 100% of 11.73MiB in 00:32
[avconv] Destination: Give me oil in my lamp-O-xlvalecI8.mp3
Deleting original file Give me oil in my lamp-O-xlvalecI8.flv (pass -k to keep)
The --audio-format parameter lets you specify the output audio format. The above command generates a mp3 file on your local hard drive. Besides mp3, you can specify other audio formats such as wav. For detailed help about the parameters, run:
$ youtube-dl --help

4 comments:

  1. Similar ends, with different tools:

    There's a program called get_flash_videos here which also downloads flv/mp4s from a variety of sites.

    I use mplayer as my media player, and it's perfectly capable of extracting audio with mplayer -novideo -ao pcm:file="your-sound-filename-here.wav" your-video-name.flv. The result of that still needs to get converted to whatever audio format, for which I use pacpl (as a sidenote, both mplayer and pacpl are packaged for debian, so that's a straight-forward installation). That's not particularly pleasant to type each time, so I've written a script that takes a video to an audio for me with the above infrastructure.

    ReplyDelete
  2. I just found this page and am very impressed with the style. Man pages have their place but it is nice to know why you might need to run a command, what you must do, what you will see and what options there are.

    Now you would really make my month with a couple of articles about screen.

    ZB

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  3. Thanks for the kind words, ZB.

    The "screen" program was definitely on my list to write. I'll push that to the front of the queue.

    Stay tuned .....

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  4. useful info about libav-tools this save my night xD great job! thanks!

    ReplyDelete