Listen Different: Adding Silence to your iTunes and iPod Playlists

iTunes and the iPod are all about music, but as composer John Cage once said, “The music is in the silence between the notes.” In fact, Cage is famous for one of his works, 4’33″, where a pianist sits at the piano for 4 minutes and 33 seconds and does nothing. The music is in the silence; or rather the lack thereof. For true silence does not exist on our planet. Any performance of this work brings out the ambient noises of the concert hall, the coughs and rustles of the audience, and all the other noises we usually never hear. (Download a performance of 4’33″ here.)

You can have 10,000 songs on an iPod, providing you with hours of listening pleasure, but sometimes you just want to listen to silence. Not that you want silence for any long stretch of time – that’s easy; just turn off your iPod – but you may want to have certain playlists, or even albums, with a bit of a pause between certain songs. A time to take a breath, to appreciate the beauty of the music.So why not use silence in your playlists? After an especially poignant song, add a few seconds of silence – 15 seconds, maybe 30 seconds, or even a minute. Let yourself absorb the song, the world around you, the people with you…

Unfortunately, iTunes does not allow this, nor does the iPod. But there is a simple solution: I’ve created a few tracks of silence that you can download and add to your iTunes music library. You can use them in any playlist, or copy them and add them to specific albums. You can download the files here:

Each of these tracks is a very low bit rate MP3 file; I encoded them at 8 kbps mono so they take up very little disk space. Each track is tagged with its name, and with the artist, album and genre marked as “Silence” so you can find them easily.

So, what can you do with these tracks? When you’re making a new playlist, think if you really need all the songs to follow each other in a mad rush, or if you want some of the music to sink in before the next song. Insert a Silence track and appreciate the music that you’ve heard before the next track starts. This is especially useful with classical music, where you want enough time for one work to fade away before another – which may be quite different in form or instrumentation – begins. (Many classical albums are engineered with long bits of silence at the ends of works for that reason.)

If you want to insert silence into an album, take one of the Silence tracks and copy it. Then, change the tags so it has the artist, album and genre for the album you want. Finally, you’ll need to edit its track number tag as well as edit all those that come after it on the album. (For example, if you want to insert it at the 3rd position, you’ll need to change track 3 to 4, track 4 to 5, and so on.)

Silence is especially useful if you make playlists for romantic situations; for mellow music that you want to listen to when meditating, doing yoga or simply watching the grass grow; or just to change the way you hear your music. You can also use them when you listen to your iPod in shuffle mode. Make copies of each of the tracks; make a few dozen of each, so you’ll get random silence from time to time, and discover the sounds of the world around you in a new way.

Addendum: a comment mentions another source for silent tracks. I’ll make a clickable link to that source here. You can try both and see which interpretation you prefer. This other source does have more choices as to length.

Posted: 4/28/2006 by kirk | Filed under: iPod & iTunes | 7 Comments »

7 Responses to “Listen Different: Adding Silence to your iTunes and iPod Playlists”

  1. What a brilliant idea! It’s one of those simple, "why didn’t I think of that" type of ideas that makes me say,

    "Why didn’t I think of that?"

    Thanks Kirk.

  2. meandtheo says:

    i’ve added 2 secs of silence (generated on audacity and converted to aac format)
    after a couple of tracks… but when i burn the playlist, the 2 seconds turns into
    6! plus the 2 seconds itunes already adds at the end of each track, it ends up at
    8 seconds. what’s up with that? i tried it again with 1 sec of silence… and still
    ended up with 8 secs. can you tell me what’s going on?

    • Kirk says:

      Wow, that’s weird. I’ve never tried to burn discs with silence; I only use it in
      playlists.

      • meandtheo says:

        i did come across this, about audio files of silence of varying lengths, made as a
        novelty & available to download (at
        http://duramecho.com/Misc/SilentCd/index.html ):

        "If you burn the tracks to a audio CD formatted to play in a normal old audio CD
        player then there are 2 restrictions imposed by the original CD spec:
        1. All tracks must be >=2 s long. Therefore the 1 s second track must be
        omitted. (I’ve included it in the download for completeness anyway though.)…"

  3. dumbledad says:

    Thanks for this (and for promoting the link to the other versions). This is exactly what I was after. My son and I are off to see Purcell’s "Dido & Aeneas" paired with Handel’s "Acis & Galatea" (http://www.roh.org.uk/whatson/production.aspx?pid=7081 ) so I wanted to make a playlist with both pieces on, but clearly there needs to be a good pause between them. Voilà

  4. Diana says:

    THANK YOU THANK YOU THANK YOU!

    I’m a teacher and wanted to do a playlist for circuit training with silence in between each track, and this makes it SO much easier!

    Again, thanks. Brilliant.

  5. Anya says:

    Thank you so much for these tracks! I am putting together a wedding iPod playlist and after the first song there clearly needs to be a pause and I didn’t want someone responsible for stopping the music at that moment. This solves the problem!

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