It looks like they are phasing that out, though, with the new "zoom" feature that lets them put up a high rez image you can't copy. SONOS PLAYLIST EXPORT MEDIA MONKEY MP3 DOWNLOADTry the MP3 download section first, as most of those seem to be 500x500. I keep relearning that stupid lesson, so now I’m systematically adding the art to the MP3 files.Ī is the best source for high definition album covers. Note: this means that just because you have album art in iTunes, doesn’t mean you will have it another player (like my Sonos system). I would rather have the art in the file, so I’m working on the art in MP3Tag. So you wind up with a mishmash, and if you backup your files or move your library, you lose the album art. They will read the art out of files, but if you add art via iTunes or WMP, they put the art in a separate folder. SONOS PLAYLIST EXPORT MEDIA MONKEY WINDOWSiTunes and Windows Media Player don’t work that way. The more recent iterations of the MP3 codec allow you to save the album art embedded in the song file. The new Apple products use cover flow, and it’s just not cool to see lots of grey squares when it could be beautiful works of art. SONOS PLAYLIST EXPORT MEDIA MONKEY TVRe album art - with my Sonos system I can display my music library on my TV (and pick songs, albums or playlists, and select where in the house I want them to play), so having high resolution album art is a very nice thing. I’ve found Foobar2000 and MediaMonkey to be good as well. MP3Tag is the best general purpose tagging utility I’ve found so far. I came here to post the same question, hoping against hope for some quantum leap in technology. (I use a Mac, for what its worth) posted by dantekgeek to Computers & Internet (16 answers total) 26 users marked this as a favorite What apps/sites/techniques can you suggest to help in my quest? Or is my vision of metadata perfection a lost cause? I'm hoping some wonderful new tool or strategy has come along since then. I know there have been a few similar questions on Ask before, but none for at least a year or so. But for fear of distorting what is already nice and shiny, I can't. If not for the fact that a good portion of my library is already impeccably organized, I'd just run the whole thing through Picard or a similar app. It was also a pain going back and forth between Picard and iTunes to cross-check things. I've played around with MusicBrainz Picard, but that really just seemed to make things worse, since hardly any of the data the app pulled from the database seemed to match up exactly with the reality of my library (conflicting track lengths, missing songs from albums, etc). I'm bugged by stupid little things like the fact that a good deal of my files are tagged slightly incorrectly, that I don't have a consistent bit-rate, that album artwork is almost a lost cause, etc. I'm more than a little bit OCD about my music collection.
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