

Sonic Visualiser is a free, open-source application for Windows, Linux, and Mac, designed to be the first program you reach for when want to study a music recording closely. It's designed for musicologists, archivists, signal-processing researchers, and anyone else looking for a friendly way to look at what lies inside the audio file.
Sonic Visualiser version 5.2.1 was released on 21 March 2025. Download it here!
Sonic Visualiser is one of a family of four applications:
Citations: If you are using Sonic Visualiser in research work for publication, please cite (pdf | bib) Chris Cannam, Christian Landone, and Mark Sandler, Sonic Visualiser: An Open Source Application for Viewing, Analysing, and Annotating Music Audio Files, in Proceedings of the ACM Multimedia 2010 International Conference.
It is not possible for me to provide a report on the file you named: .
If you have downloaded "MIMK-159-u.part09.rar" and want to see what is inside, follow these steps: MIMK-159-u.part09.rar-
Ensure that you're only accessing and extracting files that you have the right to access. "MIMK-159-u
: The parts need to be in order. If the files are named sequentially as suggested, they should be in the correct order already. If the files are named sequentially as suggested,
To successfully extract the video file, you must have all preceding and succeeding parts (e.g., part01 through the final part) in the same folder. If any parts are missing, the extraction will fail.
Here is a direct explanation:
: To successfully extract the entire archive, you need all the parts (e.g., .part01.rar , .part02.rar , ..., .part09.rar ). Missing even one part can make the entire archive unrecoverable.