Unfortunately not at the moment. However, you may remove or rename the mp3gain binary which will effectively disable it. On Mar 1, 2013 9:58 PM, "pilami" wrote:
I should mention that the mp3gain process is run with a nice level of 15. What this means is that even though it is taking 99% of your CPU, it is only doing it when the CPU is *not* doing anything else. If anything else needs the CPU (Apache for example), mp3gain will immediately give up the CPU.