![]() csv file and use the text import as described here. In Mp3tag, select all tracks and make sure they are sorted like before and in the menu bar click "Convert > Text file" - Tag or press "Alt+4".csv that you can edit in your preferred spreadsheet software, make the changes you need and save the. Select the - (That's supposed to be four spaces with a dash between them) that divides the tags with something else like Press Ctrl+H and find and replace all with (unless your tags contain that character) so it changes from Artist - Album - Title - Track - year - Genre - to Artist Album Title Track year Genre on each row.txt file with a program that can do "find and replace", I used Notepad++. Select txt_taglist in the list, select a location and filename if you want and click OK.Select all tracks or the ones you want, right click them and click "Export".Open your Mp3s in the software, sort them so they match the order of whatever list you have.Here is a list of instructions that I used and that you may be interested in: Thanks Paul, it worked really well, at first, then wanted me to install the upgrade, $30, no thanks.I believe I found a working solution using software called Mp3tag. I was buying MP3 music at that time, on the cheap, from dodgy websites. I certainly wouldn’t have sat down and numbered each one as the appear. That explains how they are numbered the way they are, as shown on my attachments. Maybe they were numbered when I ripped them, but the data’s still there and as said earlier on, they’re playable. Maybe I didn’t remove the titles and number them instead, as I originally suspected. It all happened way back in 2013 and I can’t exactly remember how the files were titled. ![]() If I’ve mislead you again I apologise, I appreciate your patience and assistance. Maybe try the free version and see if it works? Mp3tag doesn’t auto-magically detect unnamed files and tags them correctlyĪudioRanger claims to auto detect and tag. Did you rip the files from something and the ripper didn’t add the data? I don’t get how you managed to remove the data. I still have a ridiculous amount that I’ve accumulated over the last decade or so to listen to. There must be away but if it’s too complicated I’d rather just let it go and move on. I just thought there might be a simple way of retrieving the information online (?) I haven’t found MP3Tag simple to use at all. I haven’t done it with any of my other music because I like to see what I’m listening to, which I’m able to do on my player For some reason, and I can’t remember why, I removed their details, title etc, and numbered them all starting from 01 in each folder. Getting back to the one I’m asking about, it is a folder titled with the standard MUSIC and contains another 10 folders, each containing 20 or 30 music files as I’ve displayed. I do most of my listening from a USB flash drive and store everything on a external hard drive. ![]() It’s a compilation that I made up in 2013, would you believe and it’s still quite playable. Open the file in MP3Tag to check if the details are there.ĭid the detail disappear at some specific time? If it is not visible in Explorer the details may not have been stored there. The details are contained within each file.
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