Originally posted by Brassbandmaestro
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Storing CDs on a Hard Drive: Part I
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Resurrection Man
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Originally posted by Resurrection Man View Post
3) You need a system to file your music away and to be able to retrieve it. Relying on internet based tags or databases is pretty well pointless for classical music. One only has to look at CDDB, for example, to see that different people have different preferences. So it is more a question of data entry rather than editing. iTunes works quite well in this respect as it will auto-fill fields for you as you type which saves time.
To keep track of everything I use a database OCD, referring to it on an almost daily basis. For me the software does an excellent job and I have not found CDDB/FreeDB to be "pretty well pointless". It does the donkey work of data entry very successfully. You can also get details via Discogs. After download of the basic details, the programme then has plenty of scope for you to tailor things to your own preferences - which I always do. The programme integrates with music stored on the computer and I think most users work that way. For me it only applies to mp3 and flac files which are on the drive.
You can upload your database to their server in HTML form if you wish. Here's mine if anyone's interested.
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Originally posted by Stunsworth View PostThe DAC I use - Audiolab MDAC - will accept up to 24/96 via the USB connection. I would think that, or similar, would be the case for most modern DACs that can use a USB interface. Theoretically the DAC should sound better through the use of the USB port because of the elimination of jitter.
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Resurrection Man
Originally posted by gurnemanz View Post.....I'm sure I would be neurotic and copy it all to a backup drive. Then you've got issues of keeping the two synchronised.
Originally posted by gurnemanz View Post
..... I have not found CDDB/FreeDB to be "pretty well pointless". ......
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Originally posted by richardfinegold View PostActually the USB interface is more jitter prone than S/PDIF or coax or firewire. That is why there has been a big move towards asynchronous USB. And many USB interfaces are still restricted to 16/48 even on high end dacs.Steve
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Originally posted by gurnemanz View PostI have not found CDDB/FreeDB to be "pretty well pointless".
Originally posted by gurnemanz View PostI'm sure I would be neurotic and copy it all to a backup drive. Then you've got issues of keeping the two synchronised.
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Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie View PostBut what do you do with the CDs you are no longer playing?
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I would just like to mention my solution for playing music files to my hi-fi. I recently purchased an Arcam rDAC, together with an rWave. The rDAC is a little box that connects into the amplifier. The rWave is a sort of dongle that plugs into a USB port, and transmits wirelessly to the rDAC. I have a Dell laptop, which is in a different room and some way from the hi-fi. I have not experienced any difficulty with reception of the wireless signal. Because of the wireless connection, there are no earthing issues.
These Arcam items were not cheap, but the sound quality is superb, and the system is robust and reliable.
At present I have a relatively small number of music files on the computer. I label them with appropriate file names. I have therefore avoided the tagging problem (for the moment!)
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Originally posted by richardfinegold View PostI wasn't kidding in the original post when I said that after I give away a CD that I haven't played for years, it doesn't take long before I start wishing that I had it back. These are the CDs that I wish to save on a hard drive. The ones that I actually do play frequently I plan to keep in their jewell boxes.
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[QUOTE=johnb;229932]I've used FreeDB when ripping ~800 CDs (over time) and find it pretty useful. Sure, you will probably have to edit the album title and the artists to suite your preferences but most of the track titles are perfectly usable (and they account for the the bulk of the input) and it is often a matter of taste (or personal preference) whether you edit them.
I agree FreeDB is a generally helpful but you need to check the length of filenames before importing the files. I have had files that go way beyond the number of characters permitted by windows and you cannot delete, edit or rename them in the normal way.
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I'm in the process of transferring my CDs at the moment. It's a long slow process.
There seem to be 4 issues, where to store them, what format to use, how to catalogue and how to play them back.
I've chosen to store on my PC (I'll be adding network store later as the volume grows.)
I'm using FLAC format, it's lossless, reasonably compressed and supports tagging, to me the only alternative is Apple and I don't like their proprietary approach.
The difficult issue is cataloguing and I've chosen Musichi. It's designed around Classical Music (and Jazz) and it really works. Go to their website and have a free trial. It's work in progress, they are improving it quickly, particularly in adding items to their library.
The data available on-line is awful, is it Bach's:
Partita in Ema
Partita for violin in Ema
Partita for solo violin in Ema
Violin partita in Ema
etc.
and that's before we look at formatting and opus nos etc etc.
Musichi has good editing tools and after a while, I have got pretty slick at editing the data. They are also about to add another database (GD3) to the FreeDB and Amazon. I have another catalogue that I have built up over the years and I can cut and paste from that.
Finally, I have had a few issue (largely my own fault) with loading early versions of the software and they have been VERY helpful with support.
Strongly recommended.
How will I play back - well I haven't finally decided, they player software with Musichi is good but my PC is in my office not by my living room hifi.
Mike
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Paul Sherratt
You might be able to connect via your mains supply, Mike.
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Originally posted by mikealdren View PostThe data available on-line is awful, is it Bach's:
Partita in Ema
Partita for violin in Ema
Partita for solo violin in Ema
Violin partita in Ema
etc.
and that's before we look at formatting and opus nos etc etc.
by Key........ Bach - Violin Partita in E maj, BWV 1006)
by No......... Bach - Violin Partita No 3 in E maj, BWV 1006
by BWV No.. Bach - BWV 1006, Violin Partita No 3 in E maj
Another example is Schubert Piano Sonatas: whether to arrange the tag so they are sorted in key order or D no ("Schubert - Piano Sonata in Bb, D960" or "Schubert - Piano Sonata D960, in Bb"), etc, etc, etc.
Originally posted by mikealdren View PostHow will I play back - well I haven't finally decided, they player software with Musichi is good but my PC is in my office not by my living room hifi.
[Edit - added a little later]
Then there is the issue of how work numbers are sorted, e.g. Symphony No 9 and Symphony No 100, BWV 56 and BWV 156. In both these examples the sorting will probably be the opposite of what you would expect, because the programme will consider the tag as a string of characters and won't recognise the number as a number. So, in order to get, say, Haydn Symphonies or Bach Cantatas sorted in the correct order, one way is to pad out the number with zeros - e.g. 009 or 056. Admittedly it is much more of an irritation with Haydn Symphonies and Bach Cantatas than almost anything else.
Also, it is worth deciding whether to use "No.1" or "No 1" for, say, symphony, piano concert, string quartet numbers and stick to what you decide - as the two formats will be sorted separately (usually all the "No X" formats followed by all the "No.X" ones)
(If you ever decide to change the tags, mp3tag is the standard recommendation for editing them - and has quite a few very helpful features for 'bulk' editing.)Last edited by johnb; 29-11-12, 12:00.
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