6 Tips for Organizing Your Music Files
By Gary Hendricks
If you're a digital music fan, you probably
have problems organizing your music file collection.
For me, I used to have hundreds of MP3 files
lumped in one folder in my hard drive. Can
you imagine the pain I had to go through to
find one specific tune to listen to?
Organizing your music files is an important
skill to learn. Once your collection is nicely
sorted out, you'll be able to find the songs
you want quickly and easily. So set aside
some time and read through the following tips
I've come up with.
1. Create Subfolders
The single most important tip for organizing
your music files is to create subfolders
in your hard drive. Don't ever leave your
MP3 files in one huge folder called C:My
Music. Create subfolders like C:My MusicClassical,
C:My MusicPop and C:My MusicSoundtracks.
2. Ensure your ID3 Tags Are Correct
ID3 tags are used to store important
information about MP3 files. Things like
the song title, artist, album are kept
and will be displayed by your MP3 player.
Take the time to properly edit these tags
- many MP3 files you download have the
ID3 tag information all wrong. A good
software program for editing ID3 tags
is TagScanner.
3. Invest in Good Music Management Software
There are several excellent pieces of
software out there for managing music
files. Two good ones come to mind. The
first is MediaMonkey and the second is
MusicMatch Jukebox. Both programs offer
excellent music management features like
an integrated music player, CD burning
features and ID3 tag renaming.
4. Get Your Music Files from Legal Sources
If you've been downloading music using
P2P (peer-to-peer) file sharing programs
like KaZaa, you will very likely get music
files which have strange names like 56_HeyjAck.mp3.
My advice: Get your files from legal sources
like online music services iTunes or Napster
and you will avoid this problem.
5. Create Good Playlists
Most software music player (e.g. Winamp)
will allow you to create playlists. For
example, say you're in the mood for rock
songs, you can point to your folder called
C:MusicRock and create a playlist from
that folder. Save the playlist after it
is created. When you next feel like listening
to those songs, all you need to do is
load that playlist instead of trawling
through your hard drive and folders.
6. Get A Huge Hard Drive
I know this sounds a little crazy - but
running out of disk space can and will
ruin your well-organized music collection.
Make sure you have enough hard disk space
to store your music files. Say you have
10,000 music files that you absolutely
must retain and listen to. It is a very
bad idea to store, say, 8,000 files in
Hard Drive A and 2,000 files in Hard Drive
B. Very messy. It's better to store them
all in one hard disk. So get your hands
on the biggest hard drive you can find.
Conclusion
I hope this article helps you to organize
your music collection a little better.
I know it takes effort, but once your
music collection is properly catalogued,
listening to your music collection will
be a much more pleasant experience. So
don't hesitate - get organized now!
About The Author
Gary Hendricks is computer enthusiasts.
He runs three websites about digital video,
digital music and computers.
gary_hendricks@digital-music-guide.com
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