As you can see there are other options that can do things like find and replace words, strings of text or characters. So in this screen shot I have it set up to copy whatever is in the Artist field to the Ensemble field. Make sure to select “Copy Field” as show in the screen shot and then hit the Copy button. The drop down menu on the bottom half is the field you want to copy from. In the top half of the Multi Field Editor is where you select the field that you want to copy to. On the left side of the bottom half there are options to choose from, so select “Copy”. The simplest way is to go to the “Edit” menu and select “Multi Field Editor”. In Yate there are a couple of ways to copy the contents of one field or column to another. So even if these two performances came on the same CD or digital download and share the same album name, or share the same album name and “Work”, you can use the “WorkID” to further group and separate each different performance. Roon gives the example of using the “WorkID” for one performance as “London Jan 1964” and the WorkID of the second performance as “Chicago Apr 1966”. You can use something really simple such as a simple number, so one performance you could have the “WorkID” set to “1” and the other performance you could set to “2”, or you could use the different dates of each performance or the location of the performance if it was live. So the “Work ID” tag can be pretty much anything you want it to be, as long as it is the same for all of the tracks of the same performance. To prevent all the tracks with the same “Work” tag being bundled together under that work, you can use the “Work ID” tag to differentiate these performances.” I need to start doing thatĪccording to Roon, “WorkID is used to further differentiate two performances of the same multi-part work that are on the same CD or album. Do you listen exclusively to Classical and Opera music? Or do you have some rock, or jazz albums? I ask because they will be tagged a little differently.Īwesome! Good thinking about the notes too. If you want you can give me the name of an album you want to tag and I can tell you what goes where. I am sorry if I did not explain things well. If you have the same field on two different panels, they will both get filled out with the exact same thing, but will only get written to the file once. The panels are just a feature in Yate to help you visually organize things. In yate, it does not matter which panel a field is on, it will get written to the file the same. Album Detail Screen – Headline Metadata ALBUM : Mozart: The Flute Quartets Hopefully it helps explains things better. In Roon I can then use it to show me only songs that are over 5 minutes long. For example, I could give each track that is over 5 minutes long a track tag called “Over 5 minutes”. I am pretty sure this only works for non-classical albums that have tracks instead of “Works” and “Parts”. Same as album tag, but it applies to each track individually. Roon usually looks in the Album Title for the different Versions, so you need to turn that option off as well. There is also a setting in Roon that you set to let Roon know that you have these tags. In Roon you will sometimes see “Versions” next to “Discography” when looking at the album overview. This tells Roon that they are not the same and to separate them. To tell them apart you could have the version of the vinyl album set to “Vinyl” and the copy you downloaded set to “Download” or “Digital”. Later, you purchased that exact same album from a digital download store. Lets say you have the album called “Mozart: The Flute Quartetson” on vinyl and you had it ripped and converted to digital so you can use it in Roon. You do not have to put something in it though. The version is what Roon uses to split up two identical albums. Version: again, not sure what is needed for Roon here
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