Bluegrass is known for it’s hot pickers, playing faster than ears can hear. It can make learning tunes a bit difficult. Luckily, we no longer have to ruin our records and needles, or stretch out our cassette tapes with endless rewinds. If you have iTunes on your computer, then you already have a great tool for slowing down music… AND video! It’s a little known fact… but Apple’s free QuickTime Player (installed along with iTunes) is great for slowing down your favorite audio and/or video clips. It even allows you to change the pitch so you don’t have to retune your instrument! Here’s how to do it:
- Choose an audio or video file and open it in QuickTime Player (mp3s, wav, aif, mov, mp4, etc…)
- In QuickTime, choose cmd-k (Mac) or ctrl-k (PC) to open the A/V Controls (or from the Windows menu)
- Adjust the speed and/or pitch to your liking
If you don’t already have QuickTime, you can download it for free for your Mac or PC from Apple’s website. In addition, QuickTime Pro ($30 upgrade) allows you to easily set in and out points, loop edit files and more.
Also, if you have Windows Media files, download and install the free Flip4Mac’s WMP Plugin for QuickTime which then allows QuickTime to playback and slow down WMP files. And if you want to be able to open almost anything (AVI, DIVX, FLV, etc…), install Parian too!
Update!
If you’re running Snow Leopard, you have the new QuickTime X which does not have the slow down features discussed here (do feel free to join me in lobbying Apple to add these to the new player!). You can still install a compatable version of QuickTime 7 from your Snow Leopard install disc thusly:
- Insert your Mac OS X 10.6 Snow Leopard Install DVD.
- Open the Optional Installs folder and double-click “Optional Installs.mpkg”.
- Select the QuickTime 7 option and click Continue.
- QuickTime Player 7 will be installed in your Utilities folder.

Matt writes:
This is VERY dang cool. thanks!
Comment - February 8, 2008 @ 10:51 pm