Up to my Ears

August 17th, 2007

We have successfully avoided touching the large stack of boxes in our garage that held the CD collection for all the months we’ve lived here. Imagine two people, both who spent time at a music magazine and have a problem with music. I still think our collection is conservative compared to a few of our friends, especially one who is still actively DJing and purchased a file system that can hold 3,000 CDs. It’s not that bad here, but still, we’ve dreaded opening those boxes. I’m estimating around 750 CDs.

The main problem is that we don’t listen to CDs for our music anymore. It’s iPods in speakers and computers streaming using iTunes. It’s all about researching and buying online. iTunes and eMusic have been the main music stores for us for the past three or four years. We still get music sent to us on CD and we give it a listen, but it’s faster to be able to hit a website and download a sample track or two or seven than it is to deal with a CD. If we like a CD we get sent, it gets ripped and the CD goes into random unstorage where we fight it for months. Back when eMusic was unlimited downloads a month, I grabbed about 35 albums and was instantly overloaded with the weight of trying to listen to all that music. We’ve calmed it a little bit, but the music collection is only growing and having our old stuff to play for Leta is becoming more important. Like Stevie Wonder and Earth, Wind and Fire. The kid needs to know the value of a good horn section. From there, we’ll talk about John Coltrane, Miles Davis and Bill Evans. Which will open up the mention of improvisation and then we’ll go back a bit further if she’s interested. I still remember my dad playing Erroll Garner’s Concert by the Sea late at night (the piano solo on I’ll Remember April is off the hook) and talking about how jazz works, even though my dad didn’t play. I want Leta to have memories like Saturday mornings with Sly and the Family Stone, the E Street Band and bad parental dancing.

Aside from my general procrastination, I’ve been waiting for the operating system and ripping software to catch up so that I can be productive on my ripping machine while doing it all in the background. iTunes seems to have gotten there and I’m able to rip and work. I also wanted a machine strong enough to rip at a high enough rate that I won’t have to do it again. I’m ripping MP3s at 320 kbps, VBR (Medium setting in iTunes). MP3s seem to be the universally accepted file type that will play on the largest range of devices and computers. I’m doing this on an external drive that is portable and has multiple ways to connect to computers. I’ll be buying a backup drive or two to do regular backups so that our music collection has redundancy and if we suffer a crash, will be recoverable.

After one day of intermittent, not even full-time ripping, I’m in 31 albums and about 4 gigabytes. And the range of music we have is still mind blowing after all these years. I remember in late 2001, sitting down to merge the two collections and alphabetize (it’s the only way to find things after you double your CD collection). It was definitely one of those moments where you realize you are in a committed relationship. We still discuss pre-merge and post-merge as a major milestone in the relationship.

We finally opened the boxes and I started the process. It’s been kind of fun to hear random tracks from the past. I’m kind of laughing at a few of the discs… Chaka Khan’s Epiphany: The Best of Chaka Khan and Heather’s mid-90s Britpoppers bis, her cherished copy of Cameo’s Word Up and my Blue Nile collection. If you see a whole bunch of older music in my Last.fm feed, this project is why.

If any of you have done this already and have tips, please share them in the comments. I’d love to hear tips, strategies, techniques and post-mortem (post-morta? Is there a plural of post-mortem?). o


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45 Responses to “Up to my Ears”

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  1. 26
    Dale Cruse Says:

    I ripped my entire collection about five years ago or so. Since then, ALL music I’ve bought has gone into iTunes. As of now, I have 8,103 tracks.

    One thing I suggest is to fill out all relevant data in each track. Artist, title, etc. Don’t let those “Untitled” labels pile up. Label them NOW and you’ll save time later.

    And if you’re anal like me, you’ll want to standardize your capitalization and make sure you have album art for every track.

    One thing I do is delete info from the “Genre” section. Is Miles Davis “bebop” or “jazz” or “cool” or “big band” or “electronic” or “fusion” or “rock” or something else? I don’t know and don’t care. Those are all just meaningless labels to me, so I put nothing in that field.

    Lastly, I’m a bass player and I want to know who plays bass on every track I own. Whenever possible, I include the bassist’s name in the “Comments” field and that way I can easily find all tracks by a particular bassist. Works great!

    Good luck!

  2. 27
    Miriam Says:

    I’m nearing the home stretch of ripping all of our CDs, too. I rip to Apple Lossless — I don’t want to do this again! Dale’s right about the standardization of spellings, and especially so about the album art. This script will embed the album art with the tracks, so if you’ve gotten the art from iTunes, it will follow the song, not the iTunes library.

    When I’m all done, that drive will be the syncing library for the AppleTV, and we’ll have eight square feet of wall space back!

  3. 28
    pupkick Says:

    Ripping with EAC in Windows, LAME to do the conversion to mp3 at 320 CBR (I’m anal like that). Tag & Rename is the single best and most used piece of software I’ve ever owned to tag the collection. I’ve got it down to a science with Genre/Year/Artist/Title/Album/Art/Track# and, where applicable Disc# on all files. For music downloaded FlashRenamer has been a savior for getting rid of the horrid naming system most people seem to use. ## Title.mp3 for albums, Artist - Title.mp3 for “singles”. Every album folder also has the year in it, ala “Artist - [YEAR] Album” to help properly order albums by release. Seeing the OCD yet?

    Over 200 albums done, and between that and other sources, over 400gb of music. My only complaint is that itunes needs “Live Watching” of folders so you dont have to drag each new album in to the library manually. (No, I don’t let iTunes organise/name/etc my music either. iTunes only sees the library from a read only share).

    Any questions on surviving music OCD, let me know :)

  4. 29
    Ariel Says:

    I took on this project last spring. We have ~1,100 CDs (post-merge-and-purge), and 56% were un-ripped when I started. Took me two weeks. Now we have 112gb; 20,387 tracks. iTunes can hardly keep up, and accessing the shared library from another machine takes forever. Now I’m warily eyeing 500+ pieces of vinyl and a USB turntable…

    Here’s a photo if you’re curious about how much wall space 1,100 CDs take up.

    iTunes Registry lets you do fun crunching with your iTunes library data.

  5. 30
    Stu Mark Says:

    First, the plural of “postmortem” is “postmorta”

    Second, I hear you, I hear you, I hear you about the music. Music is love. No question. And all the specific artists you mentioned, worthy of multiple listenings and examinations.

    Third, my iPod holds about three-fourths of my entire collection, and it has 11,863 songs on it. Some are short, like dialog excerpts from the Napoleon Dynamite soundtrack and musical tracks like “I’s A Muggin’” from Joni Mitchell’s “Mingus” - and some are long, like one of DJ Riko’s Merry Mixmas tracks, or Gondwana by Miles Davis or Hell’s Angel’s Cracker Factory by The Flaming Lips. Lord, I miss free-form radio.

    Fourth, you’re a good parent to Leta, you and Heather. You both understand certain fundamentals that she is absorbing and will take with her to the Moon or Tibet or wherever her soul carries her.

    Fifth, thanks for sharing.

  6. 31
    stephanie Says:

    i don’t have any suggestions but it’s just that i can’t help but be reminded of high fidelity, one of my all time favorite movies because duh, i have a crush on one john cusack.

    anyway, just where he’s reorganizing his vinyl and his quiet nerdy coworker asks to help but can’t figure out what system he’s going by - alphabetically? no. chronologically? hm. no.

    autobiographically.

  7. 32
    parenthetical Says:

    Consider not automatically importing the *whole* CD. It does mean you have to look (and maybe listen) a little at the start of some discs, but you get that time back with less to import (and that adds up).

    Plus, you’ll really love never hearing or having to skip the occasional unappealing track on a bunch of those CDs again. Especially if you hand things over to the shuffle gods now and then.

    Basically, I’d suggest letting this opportunity trump the “gotta have it ALL in one place” impulse that many of us start with.

  8. 33
    navi Says:

    My husband and I (of 10 yrs) never ‘merged’ collections. of course I had no collection before we got married but our music tastes are different enough that there’s always his and mine and the few that we both claim as our own - for the most part, we like eachother’s music, but not enough to go out and purchase it ourselves (and then, there’s always the “if one of your buddies tries to throw out my cds out of an alphabetized wooden box of only music cds on the premise that I should have taken care of it, by golly he and you are going to have to hear the same cds, full blast, on your wonderfully loud stereo system”)

  9. 34
    Jen Says:

    Just to add to the pack: I also ripped about 1500+ cds at 192bps VBR. I’ve converted all of my jewelcases to plastic sleeves from univenture. Their jewelpak is the same width & height as a jewelcase but you can fit 4-5 jewelpaks into the space of one jewelcase. It made my collection so much easier to store. The jewelpaks have a section for the artwork & an area for the spine. My collection is like a card catalog now. I love it.

    http://www.univenture.com (look for single disc sleeves - available in poly or vinyl)

  10. 35
    ToddT Says:

    Well, I am in a different boat than the rest of you. I am an IT-guy. I run a smallish data-center. So my music was ripped @ home and sync’d with a copy I have in the data center. To listen @ work, I installed Jinzora (www.jinzora.com). It is a great program, I recommend it. Like Itunes, it will grab cover-art, but it will also grab artist pictures, and descriptions of the artists and albums.

  11. 36
    Mike Swimm Says:

    Jon,

    Do you miss the album covers/liner notes at all? I am trying to start buying everything on emusic and bleep but I am having physical withdrawal. Especially with some of my Impulse reissues and stuff on the Touch label.

    My collection is probably about 600-700 cds so I am dealing with the space issues as well.

    I am curious to know how you managed the virtual transition.

  12. 37
    dhgatsby Says:

    hey blurb,
    like many on this blurb, i did the same. when i was working freelance, I just sat and worked and ripped all day. it was the easiest way to break the monotony. after much research, i found that burning at 320kbps on med to high setting VBR is the best achievement of sound quality to file size as well.

    here is my tip:

    With all those disks left over after the rip, you can buy those big CD suitcases. they take up a significantly smaller space than all those jewel cases in your cd boxes with felt lining. I have over two suitcases filled with music plus another est. 40 CDs still laying around with no home yet. this also is a preventative measure in case of flood, fire, or tornado - along with your storage device, grab those suitcases and out the door you go.

  13. 38
    Bill Says:

    Seconding the CD-sleeve binder suggestions above. Holy Mary, Mother of God, what did we do before the days of CD binders? Lug around multiple heavy boxes of useless plastic from apartment to apartment, that’s what.

    I’d recommend finding an old $50 iMac (1st gen-I’ve had several 2nd gen fanless models die on me) and swap in a big drive, then use that with the auto-import feature to rip and serve music. We have one in the spare room that boots itself up every morning, opens iTunes automatically, and shares out the collection, then turns itself off at night. Sounds like you’re around the same encoding/bitrate I used, although in several years I’ll have to do it all over again.

    The only thing I haven’t been able to find is a decent OS X-based syncing program that is smart enough to recognize duplicates and be able to process them in an intelligent way so that I can sync up the new stuff on my laptop, the workstation, and the remote music server. THAT is the nightmare.

  14. 39
    Ken Says:

    I recently invested in a 1TB Buffalo NAS.

    Dude. Screw portable drives, and irregular backups. It gives me RAID 5, and 750GB of usable fault-tolerant storage on my network (with multiple computers and iTunes hitting it). All for ~$600.

    Plenty of storage for music and all my photo work. They also make a 2TB for storage hogs.

    Definitely the way to go.

  15. 40
    blurb Says:

    Thanks for all these tips!!

    I’ll probably move the library to an NAS once it has been completely imported.

  16. 41
    Pretty Lush Says:

    Is it weird that I think that sounds like SO MUCH FUN?

  17. 42
    Coelecanth Says:

    I’m moving to Australia and have been purging, well, everything. My CD collection is about 70% scratched to the point it won’t rip, so that’s a relief, just pitch it and move on ’cause most of it’s readily available on-line. But I have boxes of cassettes, boxes and boxes but no tape player. Going through them I found stuff that I’ll never find again but I can’t take them with me. I’ve been photographing each layer of titles in the boxes so I don’t forget about some of these bands. The plan is to check on-line once a year or so when I’m feeling nostalgic.

  18. 43
    jhp Says:

    FWIW Coelecanth, I ripped a bunch of cassettes a while back using an old tape player, a $5 cord (earphone jack to microphone jack–the name escapes me at the moment) I picked up at Radio Shack and a freeware program called Audacity. It was a great pile o’ cumbersome to get done, but I was able to preserve audio files that I couldn’t replace any other way.

  19. 44
    Coelecanth Says:

    jhp: thanks! I was sure there was a way but haven’t had the time to look into it. Mind you, now I’m going to have to find a way to explain to my wife why I’ve got five more boxes to put into storage. Sigh.

  20. 45
    Mish Says:

    after going through a divorce the unmerging was one of the hardest things.

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