Hello, I want to first say again how generally happy I am w dbpoweramp. Now that I'm learning about its versatility and comprehensiveness, I'm convinced it's the best for me.
I have a lot of classical cds I'm ripping. And a lot of multiset collections. (These are mostly single artist sets, so not compilations as such) The problem I'm having is caused by incomplete and/or inconsistent meta info. Often one or two cds in a set will be tagged as separate albums. Others will have single tracks misnamed, or the "artist" is confused with the composer, or the movements of a single work are not grouped under the work title.
I now know how to review and edit the meta info, and this could be the solution. But I was wondering if there are any other users who have had experience particularly with single artist multi album classical sets (often made from much older recordings...), and who could offer some tips.
thanks,
dtclarinet
I have a lot of classical cds I'm ripping. And a lot of multiset collections. (These are mostly single artist sets, so not compilations as such) The problem I'm having is caused by incomplete and/or inconsistent meta info. Often one or two cds in a set will be tagged as separate albums. Others will have single tracks misnamed, or the "artist" is confused with the composer, or the movements of a single work are not grouped under the work title.
I now know how to review and edit the meta info, and this could be the solution. But I was wondering if there are any other users who have had experience particularly with single artist multi album classical sets (often made from much older recordings...), and who could offer some tips.
thanks,
dtclarinet


Just wanted to point out that there's really no need to rip a CD in "tranches" like that. Since you edit metadata post-rip anyway, I think you'd find it easier and more efficient to rip the whole CD, load those files into a good tag editor like mp3tag, and do both the "bulk" editing (orchestra, artist, album artist groups, etc.) and fine-tuning all at once. Between dBp and a full-featured tag editor, digitizing music seldom requires more than this two-step process.
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