![]() ![]() ![]() it could actually be later than the release matched if song has been matched. I am having difficulties with the options to allow a match only if all songs in the album were matched or if all files in a grouping were matched to an album. Also Acoustid can only accurately identify the song, but many songs are available on multiple releases and Acoustids in themselves do not help identify the best release to pick. SongKong uses intelligent acoustic matching from Acoustid to listen to your songs and find matches even when they have no information at all, but also takes advantage of existing file information to. What we should match against disc no/track no if songs have disc no/track no or try matching against track no and then contiguous track no if songs only have track no.Īn additional problem I noted if if your songs do not have values in the disc no or track no fields then we try and match without this information, but in your case this information can be parsed from the filename so we should try and parse this information. But MusicBrainz can also store performer credits at release level and these. Some of your songs may have a match in Musicbrainz, but not an acoustid to musicbrainz link so will not be matchable by just acoustid. SongKong is designed to be the easiest and fastest way to organize your music identify songs, fix misspellings and add missing album art. Now track no is only one part of the score weighting used to compare each song with each track, but because you essentially have the same song twice on disc 2 with in most cases the same duration and the artist is the same for all tracks there is little to differentiate so in some cases the track no match is causing the wrong mapping to be selected. This makes no difference for disc 1 but for disc 2 it means that for this release (with 11 tracks on first disc and 25 tracks on second) the first song on disc2 is should match 11th track based on disc no/ track no but instead matches the 1st track and the 11th track on disc 2 should match the 22nd track but matches the 11th track. (Because the number of possible combinations gets too large we use a different method if release has more than two discs).īut we are comparing song track no with the contiguous track no of the release, the contiguous track no is what the track no would be if we treated the release as a single disc release, so in your example that would be tracks 1-35. For single disc and two disc releases we compare every every song with every track and then work out a match that allows every song to be matched to one track and with the best score. ![]()
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