150

How can I play audio (it would be like a 1 second sound) from a Python script?

It would be best if it was platform independent, but firstly it needs to work on a Mac.

I know I could just execute the afplay file.mp3 command from within Python, but is it possible to do it in raw Python? I would also be better if it didn't rely on external libraries.

3
  • Pyglet has the ability to play back audio through an external library called AVbin. Pyglet is a ctypes wrapper around native system calls on each platform it supports. Unfortunately, I don't think anything in the standard library will play audio back. Nov 4, 2008 at 14:37
  • If you need portable Python audio library try PyAudio. It certainly has a mac port. As for mp3 files: it's certainly doable in "raw" Python, only I'm afraid you'd have to code everything yourself :). If you can afford some external library I've found some PyAudio - PyLame sample here. Feb 3, 2009 at 15:08
  • try just_playback. It's a wrapper around miniaudio that provides playback control functionality like pausing, resuming, seeking and setting the playback volume.
    – droptop
    May 9, 2021 at 22:29

25 Answers 25

62

Try playsound which is a Pure Python, cross platform, single function module with no dependencies for playing sounds.

Install via pip:

$ pip install playsound

Once you've installed, you can use it like this:

from playsound import playsound
playsound('/path/to/a/sound/file/you/want/to/play.mp3')
11
  • 105
    Reading this made me so emotional. My eyes literally teared up with happiness. Did not expect that kind of reaction from myself. (They linked to a module I made.) Jan 24, 2018 at 14:51
  • +1 for playsound. I just tested out a couple solutions here, and this one worked the easiest for me. Unfortunately the pygame solution didn't work for me, during a brief test.
    – user189198
    Nov 24, 2019 at 19:18
  • @ArtOfWarfare They're moving in herds. Oct 18, 2020 at 7:49
  • 1
    I love how simple and probabilistic this module is ( :
    – user7075574
    Jan 11, 2021 at 16:53
  • 2
    playsound is relying on a python 2 subprocess. Please use pip3 install PyObjC if you want playsound to run more efficiently.
    – cssstudent
    Nov 24, 2022 at 4:33
53

Your best bet is probably to use pygame/SDL. It's an external library, but it has great support across platforms.

pygame.mixer.init()
pygame.mixer.music.load("file.mp3")
pygame.mixer.music.play()

You can find more specific documentation about the audio mixer support in the pygame.mixer.music documentation

6
  • 5
    For me, this was not working. I mean, it was playing but no sound. I added time.sleep(5) at the end and that worked. Python 3.6 on Windows 8.1 Nov 22, 2018 at 6:15
  • Fire package! Thanks! Sep 11, 2019 at 15:04
  • It doesn't work on fedora with standard ".wav", ".mp3" and ".ogg" (Unable to open file 'filename.format') Nov 17, 2019 at 9:06
  • 1
    @Calvin-Ruiz I just confirmed that I am able to use the above code in FC31 to play MP3 and Ogg files. I think you have a larger problem that likely needs some detailed knowledge of your platform.
    – TML
    Nov 19, 2019 at 18:16
  • This doesn't appear to work un ubuntu 20.10 Feb 12, 2021 at 21:15
23

Take a look at Simpleaudio, which is a relatively recent and lightweight library for this purpose:

> pip install simpleaudio

Then:

import simpleaudio as sa

wave_obj = sa.WaveObject.from_wave_file("path/to/file.wav")
play_obj = wave_obj.play()
play_obj.wait_done()

Make sure to use uncompressed 16 bit PCM files.

1
  • Nice, thanks -- useful for games that need to play short sound effects, and supports Python 3. Dec 18, 2016 at 15:31
20

You can find information about Python audio here: http://wiki.python.org/moin/Audio/

It doesn't look like it can play .mp3 files without external libraries. You could either convert your .mp3 file to a .wav or other format, or use a library like PyMedia.

3
  • 16
    But how do I play a .wav file?
    – minseong
    Dec 27, 2016 at 18:27
  • @minseong See here, for example. Dec 4, 2017 at 19:35
  • PyMedia is highly outdated in the meanwhile.
    – k_o_
    Nov 29, 2020 at 15:36
19

Sorry for the late reply, but I think this is a good place to advertise my library ...

AFAIK, the standard library has only one module for playing audio: ossaudiodev. Sadly, this only works on Linux and FreeBSD.

UPDATE: There is also winsound, but obviously this is also platform-specific.

For something more platform-independent, you'll need to use an external library.

My recommendation is the sounddevice module (but beware, I'm the author).

The package includes the pre-compiled PortAudio library for Mac OS X and Windows, and can be easily installed with:

pip install sounddevice --user

It can play back sound from NumPy arrays, but it can also use plain Python buffers (if NumPy is not available).

To play back a NumPy array, that's all you need (assuming that the audio data has a sampling frequency of 44100 Hz):

import sounddevice as sd
sd.play(myarray, 44100)

For more details, have a look at the documentation.

It cannot read/write sound files, you'll need a separate library for that.

1
  • 2
    Great! Just what I needed to make a class demo program about waves.
    – Bill N
    Oct 1, 2018 at 20:59
18

In pydub we've recently opted to use ffplay (via subprocess) from the ffmpeg suite of tools, which internally uses SDL.

It works for our purposes – mainly just making it easier to test the results of pydub code in interactive mode – but it has it's downsides, like causing a new program to appear in the dock on mac.

I've linked the implementation above, but a simplified version follows:

import subprocess

def play(audio_file_path):
    subprocess.call(["ffplay", "-nodisp", "-autoexit", audio_file_path])

The -nodisp flag stops ffplay from showing a new window, and the -autoexit flag causes ffplay to exit and return a status code when the audio file is done playing.

edit: pydub now uses pyaudio for playback when it's installed and falls back to ffplay to avoid the downsides I mentioned. The link above shows that implementation as well.

2
  • 2
    Pydub looks like it has quite a bit of potential as a wrapper library - I'm installing it now.
    – Shadow
    Jun 8, 2015 at 5:49
  • 2
    Damn PyDub looks nice and it's still really active. Jan 5, 2016 at 3:33
7

Aaron's answer appears to be about 10x more complicated than necessary. Just do this if you only need an answer that works on OS X:

from AppKit import NSSound

sound = NSSound.alloc()
sound.initWithContentsOfFile_byReference_('/path/to/file.wav', True)
sound.play()

One thing... this returns immediately. So you might want to also do this, if you want the call to block until the sound finishes playing.

from time import sleep

sleep(sound.duration())

Edit: I took this function and combined it with variants for Windows and Linux. The result is a pure python, cross platform module with no dependencies called playsound. I've uploaded it to pypi.

pip install playsound

Then run it like this:

from playsound import playsound
playsound('/path/to/file.wav', block = False)

MP3 files also work on OS X. WAV should work on all platforms. I don't know what other combinations of platform/file format do or don't work - I haven't tried them yet.

11
  • I get the following error: "Can't convert 'bytes' object to str implicitly" on Python 3.5 (Windows). Mar 29, 2016 at 12:24
  • @ErwinMayer - Are you talking about with the playsound module I wrote? I haven't tested it on anything newer than Python 2.7.11... I can certainly look into fixing this on 3.5... Mar 29, 2016 at 13:30
  • Indeed. It must be due to Python 3 differences. Mar 29, 2016 at 15:20
  • AppKit is a dependency. Dec 30, 2016 at 19:08
  • 2
    @ArtOfWarfare That's simply not true. It is installed with the system python, but not with most distributions, including the official distributions from python.org. Most folks I know who use python install one of the distributions to get past the SIP restrictions. To get AppKit for most distributions, a user needs to pip install pyobjc. Which makes it most definitely a dependency. Dec 30, 2016 at 23:25
5

You can see this: http://www.speech.kth.se/snack/

s = Sound() 
s.read('sound.wav') 
s.play()
1
  • 3
    Looks so clean, I wish there was a pip package for this. Ease of install is key
    – Jonathan
    Jul 2, 2015 at 8:32
5

It is possible to play audio in OS X without any 3rd party libraries using an analogue of the following code. The raw audio data can be input with wave_wave.writeframes. This code extracts 4 seconds of audio from the input file.

import wave
import io
from AppKit import NSSound


wave_output = io.BytesIO()
wave_shell = wave.open(wave_output, mode="wb")
file_path = 'SINE.WAV'
input_audio = wave.open(file_path)
input_audio_frames = input_audio.readframes(input_audio.getnframes())

wave_shell.setnchannels(input_audio.getnchannels())
wave_shell.setsampwidth(input_audio.getsampwidth())
wave_shell.setframerate(input_audio.getframerate())

seconds_multiplier = input_audio.getnchannels() * input_audio.getsampwidth() * input_audio.getframerate()

wave_shell.writeframes(input_audio_frames[second_multiplier:second_multiplier*5])

wave_shell.close()

wave_output.seek(0)
wave_data = wave_output.read()
audio_stream = NSSound.alloc()
audio_stream.initWithData_(wave_data)
audio_stream.play()
3
  • This is far more complicated than necessary - they asked how to simply play a sound, not how to manipulate it and then play it. My answer trims the unnecessary 90% from this answer and leaves exactly what the asker wanted - playing a sound from a file in OS X using Python. stackoverflow.com/a/34984200/901641 Jan 25, 2016 at 2:26
  • Although verbose, I'll disagree with @ArtOfWarfare. This is an amazing answer just for the fact that it shows how to play audio in byte format. This is specially useful when the audio is obtained from a HTTP request, and this happens to be exactly my use case.
    – Dan
    Sep 20, 2022 at 4:43
  • @Dan - IIRC, playsound accepts URLs as well as filepaths. That might be undocumented and not supported on all platforms, but I'm pretty certain it works with macOS. I think examples should be as short as possible to actually answer the question - this example is far longer than necessary for what was asked. Sep 28, 2022 at 15:14
5

This is the easiest & best iv'e found. It supports Linux/pulseaudio, Mac/coreaudio, and Windows/WASAPI.

import soundfile as sf
import soundcard as sc

default_speaker = sc.default_speaker()
samples, samplerate = sf.read('bell.wav')

default_speaker.play(samples, samplerate=samplerate)

See https://github.com/bastibe/PySoundFile and https://github.com/bastibe/SoundCard for tons of other super-useful features.

5
  • Just a headsup for anyone going for this (as I am). All the libs and their dependencies take forever to build on a Raspberry Pi 1B+ - especially numpy.
    – pojda
    Oct 14, 2017 at 1:16
  • PS: this didn't work for raspberry pi "NotImplementedError: SoundCard does not support linux2 yet", and couldn't figure out a way to fix it. I'm going with os.system("mpg123 file.mp3")
    – pojda
    Oct 14, 2017 at 2:42
  • Ah, that sucks. I guess raspberry pi is a somewhat special environment. Perhaps if you posted an issue on the issuetracker you could get it sorted out or fixed.
    – n00p
    Oct 14, 2017 at 13:28
  • On further thought, perhaps the problem is that you are using an old kernel or old python version. With newer python versions that error should not look like that i think.
    – n00p
    Oct 15, 2017 at 15:35
  • It's running Raspbian, which is basically a Debian Stretch fork. I gave up and went the os.system way which is working just fine atm. Thanks for helping me out!
    – pojda
    Oct 17, 2017 at 19:00
3

Also on OSX - from SO, using OSX's afplay command:

import subprocess
subprocess.call(["afplay", "path/to/audio/file"])

UPDATE: All this does is specify how to do what the OP wanted to avoid doing in the first place. I guess I posted this here because what OP wanted to avoid was the info I was looking for. Whoops.

5
  • Works great though does pause execution while it plays. Perhaps there is an async way to call this?
    – Praxiteles
    Feb 4, 2016 at 6:49
  • Good questions @Praxiteles. Possibly with threading. see here Please report back if you have a chance to experiment with it.
    – MikeiLL
    Feb 5, 2016 at 15:51
  • The OP explicitly asked for alternatives to this.
    – whitey04
    May 19, 2016 at 20:14
  • The OP is/was looking for an alternative to "execute the afplay file.mp3 command from within Python", and subprocessing still happens within Python, doesn't it. I stand corrected. But it probably doesn't hurt to have this little post here as it may help others.
    – MikeiLL
    May 19, 2016 at 20:23
  • @whitey04 I (finally) see what you're saying.
    – MikeiLL
    Feb 16, 2018 at 16:50
3

Install playsound package using :

pip install playsound

Usage:

from playsound import playsound
playsound("file location\audio.p3")
3

It's Simple. I did it this way.

For a wav file

from IPython.display import Audio
from scipy.io.wavfile import read

fs, data = read('StarWars60.wav', mmap=True)  # fs - sampling frequency
data = data.reshape(-1, 1)
Audio(data = data[:, 0], rate = fs)

For mp3 file

import IPython.display import Audio

Audio('audio_file_name.mp3')
1
  • Works, but only in Jupyter notebooks, quite limited...
    – mins
    Apr 20, 2023 at 15:56
3

This should work on Linux, Mac or Windows:

from preferredsoundplayer import *
soundplay("audio.wav")

Should work for mp3 also.

In Linux it will try up to 4 different methods. In Windows it uses winmm.dll. In Mac it uses afplay.

I wrote it because:

  • I kept having issues with cross-compatibility for playing sounds.
  • It also manually garbage collects calls to the winmm.dll player in Windows and appropriate closes finished sounds.
  • It has no dependencies, other than what comes with Windows 10, the standard Linux kernel, MacOS 10.5 or later, and the Python Standard Library.

You can install using pip install preferredsoundplayer (see project) or just utilize the source code which is a single file (source code) .

2

Try PySoundCard which uses PortAudio for playback which is available on many platforms. In addition, it recognizes "professional" sound devices with lots of channels.

Here a small example from the Readme:

from pysoundcard import Stream

"""Loop back five seconds of audio data."""

fs = 44100
blocksize = 16
s = Stream(samplerate=fs, blocksize=blocksize)
s.start()
for n in range(int(fs*5/blocksize)):
    s.write(s.read(blocksize))
s.stop()
1
  • Though interesting, link-only answers are discouraged. At the minimum, you should include in your answer a short example of using it. That also protects your answer from losing all its value, should the repository be renamed and the link go dangling.
    – spectras
    May 29, 2016 at 11:04
2

Mac OS I tried a lot of codes but just this works on me

import pygame
import time
pygame.mixer.init()
pygame.init()
pygame.mixer.music.load('fire alarm sound.mp3') *On my project folder*
i = 0
while i<10:
    pygame.mixer.music.play(loops=10, start=0.0)
    time.sleep(10)*to protect from closing*
    pygame.mixer.music.set_volume(10)
    i = i + 1
1

Pypi has a list of modules for python in music. My favorite would be jython because it has more resources and libraries for music. As example of of code to play a single note from the textbook:

# playNote.py 
# Demonstrates how to play a single note.

from music import *   # import music library
note = Note(C4, HN)   # create a middle C half note 
Play.midi(note)       # and play it!
1

To play a notification sound using python, call a music player, such as vlc. VLC prompted me to use its commandline version, cvlc, instead.

from subprocess import call
call(["cvlc", "--play-and-exit", "myNotificationTone.mp3"])

It requires vlc to be preinstalled on the device. Tested on Linux(Ubuntu 16.04 LTS); Running Python 3.5.

1

Try sounddevice

If you don't have the module enter pip install sounddevice in your terminal.

Then in your preferred Python script (I use Juypter), enter

import sounddevice as sd

sd.play(audio, sr) will play what you want through Python

The best way to get the audio and samplerate you want is with the librosa module. Enter this in terminal if you don't have the librosa module.

pip install librosa

audio, sr = librosa.load('wave_file.wav')

Whatever wav file you want to play, just make sure it's in the same directory as your Python script. This should allow you to play your desired wav file through Python

Cheers, Charlie

P.S.

Once audio is a "librosa" data object, Python sees it as a numpy array. As an experiment, try playing a long (try 20,000 data points) thing of a random numpy array. Python should play it as white noise. The sounddevice module plays numpy arrays and lists as well.

1
  • did this, but it's not playing anything. It's just skipping the sd.play call
    – blkpingu
    Jun 23, 2020 at 19:55
1

In a Colab notebook you can do:

from IPython.display import Audio
Audio(waveform, Rate=16000)
1
  • This worked for me: Audio(data=waveform, rate=16000).
    – jxmorris12
    Nov 28, 2021 at 22:16
1

This library aims to be simple, cross-platform and have many features: https://github.com/libwinmedia/libwinmedia-py

It requires a libwinmedia shared library, which you can download in Releases tab.

You can install it using pip install libwinmedia

Example:

import libwinmedia

player = libwinmedia.Player(True)

player.set_position_callback(lambda position: print(f"{position} ms."))
media = libwinmedia.Media("test.mp3")

player.open(media)
0
Put this at the top of your python script you are writing:
import subprocess
If the wav file IS in the directory of the python script:
f = './mySound.wav'
subprocess.Popen(['aplay','-q',f)
If the wav file IS NOT in the directory of the python script:
f = 'mySound.wav'
subprocess.Popen(['aplay','-q', 'wav/' + f)
If you want to learn more about aplay:
man aplay
0

I recently made my Music Player support all audio files locally. I did this by figuring out a way to use the vlc python module and also the VLC dll files. You can check it out: https://github.com/elibroftw/music-caster/blob/master/audio_player.py

0

For those who use Linux and the other packages haven't worked on MP3 files, audioplayer worked fine for me:

https://pypi.org/project/audioplayer/

from audioplayer import AudioPlayer
AudioPlayer("path/to/somemusic.mp3").play(block=True)
2
  • I get ModuleNotFoundError: No module named 'gi'. Again.
    – Joooeey
    Jun 10, 2021 at 14:58
  • 1
    Is that <br> really meant to be there in the import statement?
    – Brian Z
    Oct 11, 2021 at 11:22
-2

Simply You can do it with the help of cvlc- I did it in this way:

import os
os.popen2("cvlc /home/maulo/selfProject/task.mp3 --play-and-exit")

/home/maulo/selfProject/task.mp3. This is the location of my mp3 file. with the help of "--play-and-exit" you will be able to play again the sound without ending the vlc process.

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