![]() ![]() ![]() If you follow my writings, you know that I don’t use Apple Music for my main music library, but do use it on a test library on my MacBook, as well as on an iPod touch.Paragraph break before 'Analogous'.)/Rect/Subj(Comment on Text)/Subtype/Highlight/T(peterkeller)/Type/Annot>endobj137 0 objendobj138 0 obj/C/Contents(No paragraph break before 'Reproducing'.)/CreationDate(D:20160711222749-07'00')/F 4/IT/HighlightNote/M(D:20160711222815-07'00')/NM(4a2db303-1c1e-564e-9392-f8e59dcbfba2)/P 13 0 R/Popup 139 0 R/QuadPoints/RC( I recently added it to my iPad as well, to be able to use it more around the house. I don’t trust my main library to Apple Music because of the many problems that iCloud Music Library causes.Īs I’ve been adding music to my library, I’m realizing just how bad Apple Music’s metadata is. I wanted to listen to some Frank Sinatra. There’s a big set called Ultimate Sinatra, with more than 6 hours of his music. When I started listening to it, I noticed that I wasn’t hearing all the songs that I knew. I looked at this album in iTunes, and I was surprised to see how it displays. This is a single album, yet iTunes shows it as a number of different albums with different titles. I’ve sorted by album so each title should be grouped, but you can see there are four different titles for tracks in the first grouping. And that first group of tracks, which is hanging together as an album, has track numbers in a seemingly random order.įrank Sinatra is listed as the artist for all these tracks, sometimes with others. But if I view this album in a playlist by Artist, the only artist listed is Cole Porter.Īnd if I view the music by album? I see this:Īn Hour with Harry James is the title of two “albums,” and one – whose tracks show as being in the cloud, but which are unavailable (see the first screenshot above), is called Ultimate Sinatra.Īnd if I view Frank Sinatra in the column browser? There seem to be a lot of albums, many of which don’t display in other views.Īnd the way the album is listed by genre is interesting. There is no reason why certain songs are in any of these genres. These are the genres for the various songs in this album: If you navigate your iTunes library by genre, you’ll have a lot of trouble. I’ve seen that iCloud Music Library changes tags and artwork. Rather than assuming that your tags, the ones you may have manually changed, are canonical, it just decides what the tags should be on your music. For example, yesterday, I deleted composer names in all the music in the Rock genre in my library. I don’t care about composers for that kind of music those tags just get in the way when I browse using the column browser. But, today, all the composers are back for those songs. So as iTunes updates your library, comparing it to music in the cloud, it re-matches files and changes tags. ![]() When I first added the Ultimate Sinatra album to my library, it was a single album, but it changed after a while. I surmise that iTunes matched the tracks and found that many of them were on different albums. ![]() Just as iTunes often matches tracks from studio albums to “best of” albums, here, it’s matched some tracks to the album I downloaded, and other tracks to whatever iTunes found first. But, of course, iTunes shouldn’t match Apple Music tracks it only matches your music, that you’ve ripped or downloaded, and added to your iTunes library. Not only should iTunes not change metadata that I’ve edited, but tracks added from Apple Music, or downloaded from the iTunes Store, should have a unique track ID that can be used to prevent this. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
Details
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |