![]() but the metadata within each file would have these fieldsĪnd it could have other things (Total Tracks, Disknumber, Comment, etc. Does the cambridge player use filenames or metadata? That is, my FLAC or mp3 music files show up as:Ĭ:\music\The Beatles\Abbey Road\01 - Come Togther.flac PerfectTunes is not currently a metadata editor. I did also look on the internet and found another forum discussing this very problem and the advice was very complicated and involved disabling security protections on the computer (highly suspicious, I thought)Ĭan someone please help before my other half goes mad with me for wasting all this time messing about with music! I don't want to 'rip' or 'burn' material, neither do I want to delete corrupted/duplicated tracks I just want to ensure that my albums are played in the correct track order. However, I now wonder if this was the correct advice? The tool is not intuitive, I cannot see a user guide. I contacted the manufacturer of my network device, Cambridge Audio, and they recommended that I install the free version of 'PerfectTunes' to break into the music metadata. Strangely though, the Windows Media Player on my computer plays my tracks in the correct order. But when I play them the problem is unchanged. I have also used another suppliers package to edit the audio tags. I have tried right-clicking on the track names to go into the properties and have entered track numbers correctly. All a bit frustrating when trying to listen to an album which tells a story e.g. ![]() Some are fine, but most play either in the alphabetical order of track names, or no reasoned order to them at all. The problem I have is that many of the albums copied from vinyl do not play in track order (music copied from CD is absolutely fine). Last year I purchased a network device for connection to my Hi Fi system and copied all my music onto an external hard drive which is connected into the network device via the USB connection. ![]() I have saved on my computer a large music collection, most of it is copied from vinyl and saved in'.wma' or '.wap' format files, all as individual tracks in seperate folders for each album. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |