Open GoogleCodeExporter opened 9 years ago
Ok, seems like an interesting request :). Never knew this problem existed for
classical music. You do know freedb doesn't support this kind of information?
(At
least I think it does not). So the tags would have to be manually entered.
I don't think allowing custom tags is a very good idea. For one it's not very
user
friendly. It's not very consistent as well, tags should follow the official
standard
if there is any.
Could you please give an overview of the tags you want at the disc level and
which
tags you want at the track level? Optionally showing these shouldn't be a big
problem.
Original comment by rubyripp...@gmail.com
on 31 May 2009 at 12:56
Hi rubyripperdev,
Thanks for taking this serious.
Indeed also freedb focusses on non-classical music and does not provide the
possibilities to handle adequate tagging for classical music. Furthermore the
information in freedb is extremely inconsistent for classical music. This is not
unexpected because there are so many different players, which all show different
combination of tags.
The tags which I thinks are required for classical music (n addition to the tags
which are already available in rubyripper) are:
composer
conductor
band (e.g. New York Philharmonic Orchestra)
performer (e.g. Luciano Pavarotti, Placido Domingo, Glenn Gould: piano)
ensemble (can be used instead of band, but usually is considered a smaller
group,
like a string quartet, eg the Kronos Quartet(they have a nice interpretation of
Purple Haze...))
label (e.g. Deutsche Grammophone)
labelno (e.g. 415 862-2)
opus (e.g. Op 92)
All of them can be either for the album or for the track (e.g. the Ravels
Bolero is 1
piece and track on a CD, whereas the St. Johns Passion by Bach can be 40 tracks
over
2 CD's). But often CD's contain a mix of various pieces by various composers,
performed by various conductors, bands and performers.
With respect to CD's with e.g. orchestra, vocal soloists and instrumental
soloist, I
have not found a tag which could make a meaningful differences between the type
of
soloists (e.g a vocal, a piano and a horn soloist). I think putting them in the
performer tag.
The label and labelno tags can be important for people collecting various
records of
the same piece (which can be really different), think of a performance of
Bach's St.
Matthews Passion by the Dutch Concertgebouworkest (recorded in 1929, 130
minutes) and
a recent verions on original instruments of about 90 minutes...).
Summarizing, if you could include the above tags for the album and/or track, you
would make quite some people extremely happy...
Thanks again
Mike
Original comment by dispos...@bosschaert.org
on 31 May 2009 at 3:07
Musicbrainz' ClassicalStyleGuidelines should make classical music with the
standard
tags a little more bearable. Simply switch the freedb server settings to
freedb.musicbrainz.org to take advantage of this for releases present in their
database.
Perhaps Musicbrainz' PicardTagger (http://musicbrainz.org/doc/PicardTagger)
could
give an idea of what tags to use for more advanced classical music tagging.
Alternatively, you could just run your rips through Picard (or some other
dedicated
tagger, such as Ex Falso or Kid3, if you don't like Picard's automated job).
Original comment by Dhr...@gmail.com
on 4 Jun 2009 at 5:05
Thanks for pointing me to Picard by Muzicbrainz. Indeed the program is quite
useful
(and somewhat complex!). Still it would be most convenient to be able to rip
and tag
in one step, and rubyripper comes quite close. The list of tags in Picard is
quite
extensive, however being able to use a selection of those would, as far as I
can see,
provide all you would want to tag all sorts of classical music.
One thing I'm still missing is the possibility to use multiple genre tags (or
is it
possible to define more than 1?). Most classical music can be categorised under
various genres (e.g. the Mattheus Passion by Bach: Classical, Baroque, Vocal,
Religeous, ...). For my purpose I solved it (Squeezebox allows for this option)
by
entering more genres, separated by a special character. Within squeezebox I can
search all listed genres, but other programs may not have this option.
Original comment by dispos...@bosschaert.org
on 5 Jun 2009 at 12:37
[deleted comment]
Just an observation: Vorbis comments that are available for flac music files
allow a
user to add any tag they want. Ex Falso is a tag editor that allows editing of
the
Vorbis comment. Quod Libet is a player that allows editing of Vorbis comments
(it
uses Ex Falso to do this) and allows displaying of any tags in the Vorbis
comment.
Both of these apps use the Mutagen tagging library. So, while my comment
doesn't
address the issue of adding custom tags while ripping, it does allow reasonable
use
of custom tags once added with a tagging program.
I use many custom tags, and I rip all my music to flac because I do not like
compressed music. Even if I did use compression for a special occasion, I
would use
ogg. Ogg also supports the Vorbis comment. This has worked for me since my XP
days
of years ago.
Original comment by csc...@gmail.com
on 21 Jan 2010 at 6:01
Original issue reported on code.google.com by
dispos...@bosschaert.org
on 31 May 2009 at 12:28