Genre / Style
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Re: Genre / Style
'BPM' would be good for DJs I guess?
'KEY SIGs' would be good for musicians who transcribe the music they listen to.
I don't think I would add these though because - manually - they would take months to detect and compile!
PaulComment
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Re: Genre / Style
I think there are programs that you could set up to detect and tag over night(s), but I don't know how long it would take... I believe bpm would be fairly accurate, but key sometimes a little harder to detect correctly. But I'm no expert here and I don't use those tags.Comment
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Re: Genre / Style
Sometimes I feel like the Henry David Thoreau of music playback: "Our life is frittered away by detail... simplify, simplify."Comment
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Re: Genre / Style
Exactly how I listen to my music in my car, player in my smartphone set to random, bluetooth to car "radio". But I've now filled up my 256 GB micro SD card (128K +/- VBR copies of my FLAC library. I can't yet afford the 400 GB micro SD cards, so I'm going to have to weed some tracks out in the transfer process...Comment
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Re: Genre / Style
Modern dance music, whatever 'style', or 'genre' it is called this week, has long passed me by, but for others, a few BPM either way, is essential for knowing which 'style' it is. Perhaps they need some more Euro Trance, and just chill.
Does Nirvana Unplugged, become 'Accoustic', rather than, Grunge, Pop/Rock, Rock?
We could all use Popular and Other. KISS, job done. Simples!
From what I've seen from most of my friends files, Artist / Album with track numbers, and song titles are the only things they care about. I respect that, and in some ways I am jealous, because they are relaxing listening to music.
To each there own, BUT, it would be great if there was a little more standardisation, to offer us more personal choice: with compatibility.Last edited by Oggy; November 24, 2017, 09:30 AM.Comment
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Re: Genre / Style
Yes, professionals would have most use of those tags of course, but I know a few "common people" who add them for reasons I do not know.
I think there are programs that you could set up to detect and tag over night(s), but I don't know how long it would take... I believe bpm would be fairly accurate, but key sometimes a little harder to detect correctly. But I'm no expert here and I don't use those tags.
Many DJs use DAWs (Digital Audio Workstation) s/w such as 'Ableton' for their performances. These often have a sophisticated tagging engine and I dare say that such professionals make use of many other tags of which the likes of you and I would not consider.
The problem with BPM in non-electronic music is that because the band (say, The Beatles) are playing live (and with no backing-track), and so the tempo (ie. BPM) constantly wanders. This is nothing against their (or anyone's) 'musicianship', but rather a fact-of-life in that humans are not mechanical machines and able to main absolute precise precision (eg. like a drum-machine). And so, to compensate for fluctuations, the value one would have to state in the BPM field would be that of an approx. value or range:
BPM = 124~128
Cheers,
PaulComment
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Re: Genre / Style
Exactly how I listen to my music in my car, player in my smartphone set to random, bluetooth to car "radio". But I've now filled up my 256 GB micro SD card (128K +/- VBR copies of my FLAC library. I can't yet afford the 400 GB micro SD cards, so I'm going to have to weed some tracks out in the transfer process...
I ended up buying a SanDisk 200GB micro-SD to save all of my FLACS on, and to keep inside my Amazon Tablet for playback (the latter only has 16GB onboard storage). I am hoping, when I have finished ripping my collection, that everything will fit on it; otherwise, like yourself, I will have to reluctantly perform some selective omitting.
Cheers,
PaulComment
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Re: Genre / Style
Good points above! We have different needs, and libraries of different size and variety.
My friends often want my advice about software and tagging. Initially they are often dedicated, but most of them realize that it's more work than it's worth for them and settle for genre, maybe style, but rarely more. Then they usually ask if they can have my library instead... Or they just accept what they can import online. So workload is a factor naturally.
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FWIW, the Nirvana example could be this in my library:
Genre=Pop/Rock
Style=Rock; Grunge; Acoustic; Unplugged
So you can see that style is rather loose for meComment
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Re: Genre / Style
The problem with BPM in non-electronic music is that because the band (say, The Beatles) are playing live (and with no backing-track), and so the tempo (ie. BPM) constantly wanders. This is nothing against their (or anyone's) 'musicianship', but rather a fact-of-life in that humans are not mechanical machines and able to main absolute precise precision (eg. like a drum-machine). And so, to compensate for fluctuations, the value one would have to state in the BPM field would be that of an approx. value or range:
BPM = 124~128Comment
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Re: Genre / Style
Interesting! I didn't realize that BPM can vary so much within a track. I guess this is one of the reasons why musicians swing better than machines. On a similar note, an opera singer could sing slightly out of tune, and you would love this "colouration". Perfection isn't always the key...
Equally, there are songs where drummers will push or lay back on the beat and even deliberately slightly slower down or speed up. Sometimes it is not deliberate!
Whereas a drummer can play strict tempo, it is far harder to hit hi-hats and a snare drum consistently, which possibly more than tempo, is why a drum machine sounds robotic.
Astrud Gilberto sounds rather gorgeous singing desafinado, and in a Post Punk; New Wave; Goth Rock, style (!), I enjoy Siouxsie Sioux singing ...... flat.Comment
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Re: Genre / Style
Interesting! I didn't realize that BPM can vary so much within a track. I guess this is one of the reasons why musicians swing better than machines. On a similar note, an opera singer could sing slightly out of tune, and you would love this "colouration". Perfection isn't always the key...
Exactly. A drum-machine will not groove like a good drummer! Equivalently, as you point out, constant precise tuning will sound robotic after a certain period of time (ie. imagine if all singers used 'auto-tune' FX on absolutely everything); the result would be unmusical.
PaulComment
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Re: Genre / Style
Evasv,
Exactly. A drum-machine will not groove like a good drummer! Equivalently, as you point out, constant precise tuning will sound robotic after a certain period of time (ie. imagine if all singers used 'auto-tune' FX on absolutely everything); the result would be unmusical.
PaulComment
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Re: Genre / Style
My need to play my library on the road disappeared when I got satellite radio with the last car I bought, in 2006. If I ever get a new car (I'm thinking about it), it will have SiriusXM. The only problem I've had with it is when Sirius and XM Radio merged and they dropped the XM "Beyond Jazz" channel. I might never have heard of Hiromi, Ozric Tentacles, and others if it hadn't existed.Comment
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