Music Organization Tips: What Are Those Songs

You have them don’t you? Sitting there on your computer. Music files that you have zero clue as to what they actually are. You listen to the song and you know you know it, but you can not for the life of you remember the title, artist, or album its from. These files are the scourge of your digital music collection. These files sit in a place forever ignored for one reason or another. No matter how often you sit down to organize and try to figure out their titles, you only leave your computer discouraged and probably a little upset. Well, today we put an end to that. In the first article my Music Organization Tips series, we are going to work on trying to figure out what those songs on so that we can have all of our tracks identified. With all of our tracks identified we can effectively organize these files and folders of music.

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links for 2007-02-21

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links for 2007-02-20

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Death of DRM?

There seems to be a lot of talk about the “death of DRM” or digital rights. You know, that technology that only lets you play songs bought from certain stores on certain devices? Over the past couple of weeks, technology sites are writing articles talking about the possible removal of digital rights management software and how the major record labels are looking at selling non-DRMed music tracks. The reason for this line of thinking, has a lot to do with an essay written by Apple’s own Steve Jobs.

The article by Mr. Jobs, takes a serious look at the digital media download business. Steve looks at where they have been, where we are at now, and what the future should be. He makes two major points that people have been focusing on a great deal and those points are:

  • DRM greatly prohibits widespread adoption of digital media downloads

  • Only through the death of DRM will these industries see growth in consumer purchases of digital downloads

How true are those points? Probably very. The problem is that the industries in question do not wish to see DRM disappear. The companies involved simply look at these purchases as secondary income. This is a way for them to sell another version of a product you might have already purchased. Think about it. Have you heard of music CDs coming with a data side on the disc that includes digital versions of the songs on the album you just bought? Or how about purchasing a DVD that comes with another DVD that includes digital versions of the movie. You have not seen this because, if the companies did that, you are forced to purchase a digital version from iTunes or even Wal-Mart that you can place on your portable media device. This is all about income. The recording industry is working very hard to make sure that ripping your purchased CDs to your Mp3 player is viewed as an illegal, finable activity. The movie industry has already had a win, when a court ruling said that ripping DVDs for personal use is a violation of the DMCA.

Will the removal of DRM greatly increase the digital downloads market? If reading the comments on websites like Slashdot or Digg are any kind of gauge, then most definitely. The geeks hate DRM and go out of their way to avoid it. They will purposefully download their CDs and movies rather than go buy the product in a digital download store. Fair use is king in these people’s court and they will do whatever it takes to exercise that right. So, when a top geek like Steve Jobs announces that he wishes for the music industry to move away from DRM and towards open tracks that can be played on any player or computer, some see this as the beginning of the end for DRM.

Will Steve’s essay truly single the end of DRM? Probably not, the music industry has put so much time and money into these kinds of technology, that to just flat out abandon them is a waste of time and money to them. Plus to have DRM-free songs just floating on people’s computers is, to them, an invitation to piracy. While I think that Steve Job’s essay is going to make some people stop and think, I do not see it drastically changing the direction we are headed with digital downloads.

Steve might have the right idea but I really do not foresee much coming to fruition from it.

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Artist versus Album Artist

I seem to get a lot of hits from searches about the difference between the “Artist” and “Album Artist” tags in the Mp3 ID3 tagging specification that leads people to the second part of my “Building Your Digital Music Library” series. Instead of requiring people to read half of that article to find the answers they need, I figured I would do a whole post on it.

The difference is between the “Artist” tag and the “Album Artist” tag is really quite simple. The “Artist” tag is the artist(s) as they appear on the CD. For example on Ben Harper’s live album “Live From Mars” the album is credited as “Ben Harper and the Innocent Criminals” so that is what the “Artist” tag would be. The “Album Artist” tag is where the album would be found in a music store, in the Ben Harper example, this would be “Ben Harper” not “Ben Harper and the Innocent Criminals” since if you were shopping for the album you would look under “Ben Harper” to find it.

Another example to demonstrate the difference between the “Artist” and the “Album Artist” tags in ID3 is compilation CDs like movie soundtracks. The “Album Artist” would be tagged with “Various Artists” or “Soundtrack” but something rather generic. On the other hand, the “Artist” tag would get tagged with the name of the artist that actually performed the song. For a specific example, lets look at the Hackers soundtrack. Track number 3 on this sound track is “Voodoo People” by Prodigy. The “Album Artist” tag gets tagged with “Various Artists” while the “Artist” tag gets “Prodigy” in its tag. The purpose for the two different tags is for better organization. You can now search for “Prodigy” to find this song or you can group it as a compilation in iTunes and it will get organized accordingly. Allowing some form of separation.

So, a nice way to look at things is the “Artist” tag is equal to something like a “Track Artist” and the “Album Artist” is the artist for the entire album.

I hope this clears things up a little.

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Weekly Reads 2007-02-16

This week’s weekly reads, includes some links you can’t live without, getting things done with Google, replacing consumer products on the cheap, and much more. Be sure to scope out some of these articles that I found interesting.

Copyblogger:

Problogger:

Open Loops:

Lifehacker:

Baron VC:

The Simple Dollar:

Web Worker Daily:

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