

Mp3tag tutorial windows#
If I ever go to a Windows environment again, there is no question I’d use Mp3tag to tag my music files. I don’t have Mp3tag on my computer any more because Ex Falso seems to work to edit stuff EasyTAG cannot and I’d rather use programs that work with Ubuntu natively at the moment. To edit that and delete any tag information that EasyTAG can’t edit, I used Mp3tag, which works great in WINE.

Section 2 consists of all the drop-down menus associated with Mp3Tag, the specific functions of each menu can be found. Also in EasyTAG you can’t edit the album artist. Step 2: Basic Interface Rundown Section 1 is the heart of Mp3tag, and is a table of different data which you can edit this data is commonly referred to.

I use Banshee now, but I’d still like everything to show up right in Rhythmbox. I love EasyTAG for the most part, but there still seems to be some tag information that stays with the mp3 even after you delete the tag and redo it that shows up in Rhythmbox, which can be really annoying. I used Wikipedia, Amazon, and Last.fm for album information and album art and since I used Ubuntu, I used EasyTAG to tag everything. When I re-tagged everything, I decided to manually tag all my songs instead of using a service that would tag it for me. Instead it leaves a mess within the folder that the song resides in. However, I don’t really like how they tagged most of the songs and I hate that they don’t embed the album art with the file. Originally when I tagged these, I used Windows Media Player and it’s album search service. I’m the same way! Last month I went on a crusade to re-tag all my music to make sure it was tagged correctly and had embedded album art.
