I use iTunes fairly extensively for maintaining a collection of digital tracks, some downloaded, and others ripped from CD, and some sourced from recordings.
I just noticed this one:
Glazunov: Symphony 4
1st Movement: 13:38 (mins) I. Andante - Allegro moderato
2nd Movement: 5:30 II. Scherzo: Allegro vivace
3rd Movement: 11:13 III. Andante - Allegro
The details say:
Glazunov: Sinfonien Nr. 4 & 5
Alexander Konstantinovich Glazunov, Various Artists
and it appears to date from 2011.
I don't recognise the performance from the sound or other obvious characteristics.
Is there any obvious way to find out who the conductor is, and any more about this?
I assume that as it is in iTunes already it's been through the database search business, but unfortunately the details are too sketchy. While this isn't a very common problem, it must occur often enough to be worthy of solutions.
Can errors or peculiarities in the information already provided give a clue? There aren't too many in this listing, but sometimes there are enough errors to make a match on the online database a real possibility surely.
I doubt that the bit rate information will be too useful - here it's 256 kbps MP3. I could find the file sizes of each movement if that helped. Perhaps if it was a download (it might have been) then that would be a way of homing in on the details?
What would happen if I exported the tracks, stripped off the info, then tried to reinsert the "album" into a player? Would that have another go at finding a match?
Do any of the matching tools use spectral analysis to match recordings? There must surely be ways of finding out what this recording is.
I just noticed this one:
Glazunov: Symphony 4
1st Movement: 13:38 (mins) I. Andante - Allegro moderato
2nd Movement: 5:30 II. Scherzo: Allegro vivace
3rd Movement: 11:13 III. Andante - Allegro
The details say:
Glazunov: Sinfonien Nr. 4 & 5
Alexander Konstantinovich Glazunov, Various Artists
and it appears to date from 2011.
I don't recognise the performance from the sound or other obvious characteristics.
Is there any obvious way to find out who the conductor is, and any more about this?
I assume that as it is in iTunes already it's been through the database search business, but unfortunately the details are too sketchy. While this isn't a very common problem, it must occur often enough to be worthy of solutions.
Can errors or peculiarities in the information already provided give a clue? There aren't too many in this listing, but sometimes there are enough errors to make a match on the online database a real possibility surely.
I doubt that the bit rate information will be too useful - here it's 256 kbps MP3. I could find the file sizes of each movement if that helped. Perhaps if it was a download (it might have been) then that would be a way of homing in on the details?
What would happen if I exported the tracks, stripped off the info, then tried to reinsert the "album" into a player? Would that have another go at finding a match?
Do any of the matching tools use spectral analysis to match recordings? There must surely be ways of finding out what this recording is.
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