If you searched "sample finder music," you probably want to pull a clean chunk out of a track, a chorus, a loop, a short section, without it cutting off mid-phrase. Audjust finds the natural sample points in a song: it detects the beats and where sections begin and end, so when you trim or resize the track, the cuts land on musical boundaries instead of random spots.
Open the editor in your browser, then upload an MP3 or WAV. The tool analyzes the audio and marks the beats and sections on a timeline. Drag to select the part you want, then shorten or extend the track to a target length and play it back to check the edit. It's free, with no signup or install.
A typical case: you need a short looping section for a video or a ringtone. Pick the part between two detected boundaries, trim to it, and the clip starts and ends on the beat. Or you cut a long intro down to the part you actually want.
One thing to be clear about: this finds the sample points inside a track you provide. It does not identify which records a producer sampled, and it isn't a database lookup. It works on the audio you give it.
So, can it find the best place to cut a song? Yes. It highlights the beat and section points and lets you snap your selection to them, so your shortened or looped clip sounds deliberate rather than chopped.