![]() It's a nice feature that you can now upload wavs for your songs. Just a note that what you hear when you listen to songs on your profile (the result of website algorithm conversion) it NOT what screeners and clients hear. On some occasions I found that when you upload an MP3 the resulting TAXI file can be a catastrophe in sound quality (which is a result from the MP3 on MP3 conversion), while when you upload the high quality WAV it works out fine. That is because their algorithm takes all files and reconfigures them as MP3 192 KBit/s files. Important tags like Composer and Title can easily be verified by simply playing the file from Windows Media Player (or other players).įor TAXI submissions however, I can recommend to never upload MP3 files, but only WAV. This gives the opportunity to set many tags easily. I don't know if it helps, but as the last step of production I normally load the high quality WAV track into Audacity, make minimal adjustments to start and ending and export it to MP3 or a new WAV file from there. I will have song title, artist name, album artist name (I make those 2 the same), album (email address) and my phone number in the comments.Ĭontributing artists: Charles P. That one pretty much always stick sand shows in most players. My method is to put my email address in as album name. My point is if you get those basic ones in there by Windows right click or other method, don't sweat the others. Based on my conversations with library owners, they rarely care about more detailed tags in an mp3 and wouldn't even look for them there. Some will have you put tags in aif files (they can stick there) but many have you send them separately by spreadsheet, form, upload to website, etc. ![]() When it comes to more details, libraries will want a hi res aif or wav file. This is in case your mp3 gets separated from it's source (email, download, etc.) What you never want to have happen is for a library to be interested in a song and have no idea who to contact about it. The main purpose is to make sure song title and your name and contact info are in there. Keep in mind that for 99% of purposes, only a few simple tags are needed for an mp3 file as far as sending to libraries, etc. If the some of the tags are different in the list of files, you'll see something like "" instead of values, but if the tags are consistent between all the selected files, you'll see the tag values you added. ![]() ![]() If you want to check all the tags for a group of files that would have all the same tags, you can select those, then go into the Extended Tags view to check out all the fields. For example, there are both One sanity check that will give you an idea if everything is there is to close down MP3tag, then load it again to check files in the same directory. The method mentioned above regarding right clicking on an MP3 file in File Manager then going to the Details tab can help, and a quick check of that on some files I just tagged with MP3tag demonstrates that it shows most of the tags I used, but not all. For example, it doesn't have the Publisher field, nor the BPM or Initial Key fields, the web site fields, etc. Cakewalk doesn't provide as many potential fields as MP3tag (and probably other programs of that sort). ![]()
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