Tidy Up iTunes MP3 Collection - Fix ID3 Tags And More
One of the reasons I haven’t been posting recently is I’ve been spending a lot of time organising my music collection. If like me you have a big music collection gathered from lots of sources, then you are probably having the same problems with the awful metadata that some tracks have.A lot of my tracks have weird or missing track details, errors and for some tracks I have no ID3 tags at all for the artist and album. I also have a lot of duplicates which have happened from mistakenly importing the same CD twice, or when I’ve added a friends collection to mine and they have the same track but with a slightly different filename, so it slipped through the net.
Given that my collection is continuing to grow, and I am increasingly accessing my library via other PCs, devices and my Xbox via Xbox Media Centre I decided it was time to tidy things up before it became an impossible task.
Below are the steps I went through, which I will now do with all new tracks before they get into my library.
Step 1 Tagging
Update: I have written an updated guide to tagging mp3 files. If you want to tidy up your iTunes collection then carry on reading, but if you just want to tag your files read the new guide.
Even if your tracks have been imported directly from CD the ID3 tags can still contain errors, especially if you are importing old CDs or non-mainstream CDs. The best tool I have found to fix tags is MusicBrainz Tagger. This great tool scans your various music files and writes clean metadata tags (ID3 tags or Vorbis comment fields) to your files.
For files that MusicBrainz doesn’t recognize, MB submits acoustic fingerprints (TRM ids) of the files back to the server and asks the user to manually edit the track information, so that the next time someone uses the tool these tracks will be identified.
MusicBrainz allows you to set the threshold at which it thinks it has a match. For my collection I found that very few mistakes were made with a threshold of 80% and I was able to automatically update the tags on around 50% of my 8,000 track collection this way.
For the other 50%, MetaBrainz Tagger still made a pretty good guess as to what the correct tags were. In some cases I was able to automatically accept MB’s best stab, but in other cases I had to use the tools within MB to find the correct details. This took quite a long time, but was worth the effort as MB helped me identify a lot of previously unknown tracks and artists. Sorting by album proved to be the quickest way to process my tracks as once I’d confirmed what album a particular track came from I could usually process another 10 tracks from the same album immediately.
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Pingback by links for 2007-05-22 at LifeParticles.com on 22 May 2007:
[...] Tidy Up iTunes MP3 Collection - Fix ID3 Tags And More | Connected Internet (tags: software music mp3) [...]
Pingback by Getting Vista, Zune Or Another MP3 Player? How To Migrate From iTunes » Connected Internet on 15 January 2007:
[...] iTunes will now whirr away and move all of your mp3 files to one folder for easier management. Stage II - Make Sure All MP3 Files Have ID3 Tags [...]
Comment by Phil on 21 November 2006:
[Comment ID #213 Will Be Quoted Here]
this file if 404′d now. anyone else know this?
Comment by Everton Blair on 25 June 2006:
Thanks for pointing this out Matt. For some reason the file on the server which redirected all my old links to the new site links got deleted. Without this file every external link before the move (including from search engines…) would be broken.
Luckily I made a backup so everything is ok now. thanks again
What don’t you like about the new theme?
Comment by matt kowalski on 25 June 2006:
the link under the article to other itunes article, doesn’t work
http://www.connectedinternet.co.uk/blog/_archives/2005/11/24/1420681.html
ps: new themes … suck a bit
Comment by Everton Blair on 8 June 2006:
I would use mp3tag. You can use it to automatically add tags to files based on how they are stored on your computer e.g. Artist/venue/date and also by the filename.
It will take one minute and then all have to do is just use the usual file/import function in iTunes.
Whole process shouldn’t take longer than 15 minutes.
Comment by Bill on 8 June 2006:
Anyone know how to import home-recorded MP3 files into iTunes? I have 1000’s of home recordings which are all neatly filed in sub-directories by artists, venue, and dates. I would like to script that info to populate this into iTunes.
Comment by Anonymous on 24 May 2006:
If you really want to clean up your mp3 collection use Zortam Mp3 Media Studio. (http://www.zortam.com). I managed all my files within day and left it over night to download lyrics and covers for my iPod.
Comment by dem on 2 May 2006:
im very new silver surfer ,thanks for all the info ,just done the double killer and now on the Music tagger.;35300 tracks and still going a lot of work to get them right
Comment by Geek Habitat on 21 February 2006:
Christmas time brings new iPods and other MP3 players to many, many people — even those of us who've already owned three or more generations of the little white (or now, black) beauties. A new portable music player always seems to make me feel a litt…