So with the most recent Spotify nonsense I’ve finally had enough and I’m going back to mp3. Unfortunately, I haven’t had to do this since Bush left office and I do not have the free time to manually sort and document every single file I have. I’ve been using MusicBrainz Picard but I don’t know if the learning curve is steeper than I have traction for or if it’s just really picky.

Anyone got suggestions on how to better manage all my jams? I’m trying to make it user friendly as I can for the family and so far I’m not winning lol

  • Chaser@lemmy.zip
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    6 days ago

    I’m using MusicBrainz Picard. However there are some tricks to spare you some nerves:

    • you can set weights to release types in the settings. Singles and compilations should have a lesser weight than albums.
    • Don’t add too much music at once. Or you’ll get crazy selecting the correct releases. I usually go with one artist a time. Especially for older artists I just add one album a time. You can enable the file Browser in the view settings, than you can just drop them in one after the other.
    • in the right pane you can just drag and drop whole releases to merge them together.
    • Also noticable is the rename feature in the settings. It’s just awesome!
  • Localhorst86@feddit.org
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    4 days ago

    My workflow is:
    -Musicbrainz Picard to get all the information from an online database
    -clean up the tags with kid3 (Linux), rename files and folders
    -use mp3gain to “normalize” all songs to the same level, so I don’t have to constantly adjust the volume.

  • freebee@sh.itjust.works
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    5 days ago

    Musicbrainz Picard, there is no better user friendly solution.

    Yes, it can seem like a lot of work, but you can also look at the flip side: you can learn a whole lot about the music you like in the process.

    If music metadata is missing for stuff you have and like, add it to musicbrainz yourself. No, it isn’t particularly fun, but someone has to do it. I do it sometimes for more “local” albums of which I own the physical record or CD.

    If shit is really messed up and you have a historic collection of mp3s from back in the days when getting a full album took a long time: don’t be scared to throw stuff out and source it again. It’ll likely be much higher quality for same or smaller filesize and have better metadata from source already, which makes using musicbrainz a lot easier. And what took many hours back then takes seconds to minutes now.

  • handsoffmydata@lemmy.zip
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    5 days ago

    Plexamp for music streaming so I have CarPlay compatibility and Tunaar as a custom IPTV xml provider where I created an MTV like channel that plays ~200 music videos between Daria and Beavis and Butthead episode blocks through Jellyfin.

  • merde alors@sh.itjust.works
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    7 days ago

    EasyTAG is a simple application for viewing and editing tags in audio files.

    It supports MP3, MP2, MP4/AAC, FLAC, Ogg Opus, Ogg Speex, Ogg Vorbis, MusePack, Monkey’s Audio, and WavPack files.
    And works under Linux or Windows.

    • nasteva@jlai.lu
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      7 days ago

      Used to use this, but sometimes, opus encoded audio in ogg files gets somewhat corrupt when adding a cover image

  • starshipwinepineapple@programming.dev
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    7 days ago

    I selfhost navidrome for the music streaming (+symfonium app for mobile). Multi user and multi library support.

    For music tagging itself ive used beets, picard, and kid3 (kde). Currently I am liking picard the most. It took a little bit of learning but less than beets

  • cerebralhawks@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    7 days ago

    I host with Plex. It doesn’t pay attention to my carefully crafted tags, it uses its own. I still do the work with Mp3Tag. But I do m4a. Better quality than mp3 and better licensing. My files are a little bigger than 320k mp3 and sound almost lossless.

  • gccalvin@lemmy.world
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    7 days ago

    MP3Tag + MusicBrainz Picard. I use MP3Tag to set the ID3 tags and picard to move them into the folder structure I want.

    It takes a couple hours to set everything up, but I can’t rely on Musicbrainz alone because my music has no metadata on Musicbrainz, so I set the tags myself.

  • curbstickle@anarchist.nexus
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    7 days ago

    Lidarr + Picard when needed is about all I do, need for Picard is pretty rare at this point, except when pulling in tracks from burned CDs of esoteric mixes I made quite a long time ago.