Ran the Music Converter and the Batch Converter and get a number of these error messages. What I was doing was just using the converter to add DSP (Normalizing the levels) not actually changing the file type.
When I look at the file properties these are all M4A (AAC) files that were originally "ripped" with iTunes. What is strange is that this is sort of "hit or miss" in that its not the entire disk but an occasional track. See two examples of the properties.
When I attempt to play the file I get a short burst of high pitch sound and then the cursor just moves through the audio file with no audio.
I am now going through the process of ripping the original CDs (these were commercial disks, not anything that I made) using dbpoweramp ripper to fix the digital library.
Two questions: Since these are M4A is there any chance the tags (probably MP3 type) are causing an issue? I don't think its the actual audio but the header that is causing the converter to fail.
And when I went back through the library with the error list, sure enough each file would not play --- but it did at one time. The player I'm using is MediaMonkey 5 (and iTunes 12.12).
Question: is there a way to use any of the dbpoweramp tools (Batch Converter, etc.) to just scan the library looking for failed/corrupt files without actually taking any other action - just to get a printout of the corrupt files that need corrected? Now I am using the error list to only rip the failing tracks and not the entire disk. After I do that I would like to scan the library looking for missed error files. (Current library size" 5,000 files - so it does take a while to run through making conversions or adjustments.
I'm not sure what is "clobbering" the occasional audio file - the player, the tag write process, etc. but this has happened before and for some reason its the same track on the same disk each time if I remember correctly. I've even wondered if I should just rip my entire library with depoweramp and maybe it was the original iTunes encoder process. I don't know what all the information is in the Properties - but maybe someone will see something that indicates the failure.
I want you to know this is not a dbpoweramp issue --- just looking for someone who may have experienced this before ---- and any tools ---- without running the batch converter I would never have known that I had a problem --- other than watching the player skip a track and move on the the next one.
Thanks very much.
When I look at the file properties these are all M4A (AAC) files that were originally "ripped" with iTunes. What is strange is that this is sort of "hit or miss" in that its not the entire disk but an occasional track. See two examples of the properties.
When I attempt to play the file I get a short burst of high pitch sound and then the cursor just moves through the audio file with no audio.
I am now going through the process of ripping the original CDs (these were commercial disks, not anything that I made) using dbpoweramp ripper to fix the digital library.
Two questions: Since these are M4A is there any chance the tags (probably MP3 type) are causing an issue? I don't think its the actual audio but the header that is causing the converter to fail.
And when I went back through the library with the error list, sure enough each file would not play --- but it did at one time. The player I'm using is MediaMonkey 5 (and iTunes 12.12).
Question: is there a way to use any of the dbpoweramp tools (Batch Converter, etc.) to just scan the library looking for failed/corrupt files without actually taking any other action - just to get a printout of the corrupt files that need corrected? Now I am using the error list to only rip the failing tracks and not the entire disk. After I do that I would like to scan the library looking for missed error files. (Current library size" 5,000 files - so it does take a while to run through making conversions or adjustments.
I'm not sure what is "clobbering" the occasional audio file - the player, the tag write process, etc. but this has happened before and for some reason its the same track on the same disk each time if I remember correctly. I've even wondered if I should just rip my entire library with depoweramp and maybe it was the original iTunes encoder process. I don't know what all the information is in the Properties - but maybe someone will see something that indicates the failure.
I want you to know this is not a dbpoweramp issue --- just looking for someone who may have experienced this before ---- and any tools ---- without running the batch converter I would never have known that I had a problem --- other than watching the player skip a track and move on the the next one.
Thanks very much.
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