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Music App That Finds Album Art And Puts Tracks In Order For Mac



The quickest way to find a CD in a pile of jewel cases is by looking for its familiar cover. Similarly, you can use Cover Flow in iTunes to scroll through your songs and albums, and iOS devices let you flick through your music in Cover Flow view with your fingertip. Album art is both useful and decorative; it’s much nicer to see your music with cover art than the boring, default gray musical note graphic. Here’s how to find, add and work with album art in iTunes.

Add Artwork to an Album or Group of Songs in iTunes Mar 6, 2012 - 9 Comments You probably know by now that you can get album art from iTunes via the Advanced menu. Music Tag is a powerful utility which enables you to complete your music collection by automatically downloading missing Cover Art and Track Info for all the songs in your music library. Make your album art stick. Most modern media players can grab matching album artwork from the major sources—Amazon, iTunes, or paid commercial databases—but don't do such a hot job of.

Find album art

To hunt down album art for tracks you’ve ripped yourself, you can employ one of several methods. The easiest way is to have iTunes do it for you (you’ll need to set up an iTunes Store account if you don’t already have one). As you rip a CD, you can have iTunes check the iTunes Store for album art. To do this automatically, select Automatically Download Missing Album Artwork in the General pane of iTunes’ preferences. After you finish ripping an album, iTunes will then connect to the iTunes Store and, if it finds the artwork, download it and add it to your library (note that this works only if the iTunes Store sells the album).

Windows phone app for mac. Even if the Store offers the album you’re looking for, the tags iTunes downloads from the Internet for a CD you’ve ripped yourself may not exactly match the artist, album name, and song names of tracks in the iTunes Store. So if iTunes can’t find the art for an album you know it sells, check how the album is listed in the Store, correct your tags, select the tracks in iTunes, right- or control-click on them, and choose Get Album Art. iTunes will then check the Store again. You can do this anytime for music that doesn’t have album art.

[Note: To make it easier to add artwork, you might want to sort your music so you can find all the tracks that are missing art. On his excellent Website, Doug Adams has an AppleScript called Tracks Without Artwork To Playlist 3.3 (payment requested) that can create a playlist of these tracks for you.]

If iTunes can’t provide the album art you want, the best way to add it is to copy graphics from Websites. You can use many image formats, such as JPEG, TIFF, PNG, and GIF, and you can add album art to all kinds of music files—with the exception of WAV files—and to videos and movies. You can also change album art in protected files, with the exception of audiobooks from Audible.com.

A good place to start searching for album art is Amazon.com, which has cover graphics for most of the albums it sells. Find the product page for an album, and you’ll see an image of its cover. You can save this image or, in some cases, you can click on it to see a larger version. Small images are generally 300 by 300 pixels, which is large enough to display well on an iPod classic or nano. Large images are usually 500 by 500 pixels, but they sometimes have white borders that you may want to crop.

You can also find album art on other retail Websites—CD Universe, for example, has large graphics at 450 by 450 pixels, with no white borders. If you’re a member of eMusic, this site has album art at 600 by 600 pixels. The sites of artists or labels often include album covers as well. And you can do a Google image search, where you can narrow down the results by image size and then follow your chosen image to the Website that hosts it.

In some cases, you may not find any album art that corresponds to your music: the disc may be too old or too obscure, and some live recordings and other downloaded music simply don’t have covers. If you have a physical CD, you can scan its liner notes and add the resulting image. For live music, you could use a photo of the band or performer pulled from a Website.

Some software can simplify the art-searching process. Equinux’s $40 CoverScout 3 () can handle the heavy lifting and present you with a number of choices from various web sites. TuneUp Media’s $20-a-year or $30-a-lifetime TuneUp () displays as a sidebar next to your iTunes window, and can find album art, as well as performing other functions to clean up your iTunes library. And Cloudbrain’s $39 TidySongs offers a similar feature set. Whichever of these programs you choose, you can save a huge mount of time compared to manually searching if you have a lot of songs without album art. However, if you get used to adding album art to your music, you’ll get into the habit of first checking the usual locations: iTunes and band or label sites.

Keep size in mind

As I mentioned, you’ll find album art in many different sizes—the size you choose depends on how you plan to use the art. In iTunes, the smallest Cover Flow view scales art to 200 by 200 pixels, though you can expand the Cover Flow pane and get images that, on a 27-inch screen, are as large as 1030 pixels. So if you plan to use Cover Flow a lot, you’ll probably want large album art: for the best quality in scaling, and flexibility across a variety of devices, I recommend using the largest you can find, up to 600 by 600 (the iTunes Store supplies album art at this size). On the iPod touch and the iPhone, with the new retina displays, images this size look excellent. On the iPod classic they max out at around 100 pixels square, and the iPod nano offers a 240 by 240 pixel screen. So depending on where you view your album art, you may want to take into account these sizes.

If you scan your own images, 600 by 600 pixels is a good choice. Even if you only view it on a portable device, with the new Retina displays, images look crisper in sizes like this. No matter what size you choose, though, you want to make sure the images don’t take up too much disk space because album art inflates the overall file size of your tracks—if you add a 1MB image to every song in a dozen-track album, that’s 12MB added to your library, taking up space on your iOS device and on your Mac. So check the file sizes of your images, and, if necessary, reduce them in a graphics tool by adjusting the compression. If your originals are TIFFs or BMPs, save them as JPGs, and you’ll save a lot of space.

Add artwork to your files

Once you’ve found the artwork, you can add it to your files. For single files, the easiest way to add artwork is to select a file in iTunes, press Command-I to get its information, and click on the Artwork tab. Either drag a file into the artwork box, or paste a file that you have copied from, say, a Web page. Click on OK to save the art. You can even add multiple graphics in this box; just drag an additional graphic into the box before or after the current one, or click outside any existing graphic to make sure it’s not highlighted and then paste in the extra graphic.

For multiple files, select the ones to which you want to add album art and then press Command-I. This time, you’ll see the Multiple Item Information window. Drag or paste art into the Artwork box, and then click on OK to save it. Note that this action replaces any single or multiple graphics you may have added to the selected files, so this is an easy way to make sure that you have consistent artwork for an entire album.

When you download album art from the iTunes Store, iTunes doesn’t add the graphics to your files, but rather it puts them in a central folder on your computer. You can view the graphics in iTunes, and they will accompany your songs to your iPod, but these images aren’t portable; if you copy a track to another computer, it won’t have the album art. To get around this, select a track, then Get Info. Click on the Artwork tab, then click the album art to select it, and then copy it. Close the Info window, select all the tracks of the album, and paste the copied image as above. This will embed the art in the files, rather than keeping them separate.

Another way to add or view artwork for any file is through iTunes’ Artwork Viewer. To see it, select View: Show Artwork or click on the last of the four buttons in iTunes’ lower left corner (if the top of the Artwork Viewer says Now Playing, click on that text to change it to Selected Item). If the selected tracks in iTunes have album art, the viewer will display it—if not, it will say Drag Album Artwork Here. Drag graphics to this section to add them to the selected files. If you already have artwork in your files and you drag art there, it gets added to, but doesn’t replace, the existing artwork. If selected files have more than one graphic, you’ll see small arrows on either side of Selected Item that you can use to scroll backward or forward through multiple images. And if you click on an image in the viewer, it will open up in its own window at a large size. If it’s in “Now Playing” mode, you can hover your pointer over the window to view playback controls. You can use this “artwork player” to control iTunes. (See the first image in the story.)

For video files, you can set a poster frame for almost any video you’ve imported. This is a specific frame from the video that you want to display as artwork. To do so, play the video until you find the frame you want to use and then pause it. Control-click on the video and choose Set Poster Frame.

Pretty pictures

While it can be time-consuming to add artwork to your library if many of your tracks are missing it, once you get your library up to date, it’s easy to add artwork for each new album you get. And you’ll find that your iTunes library, and your iOS devices, look a lot nicer too. And if you’re really creative, you can even try creating your own cover art.

[Senior contributor Kirk McElhearn writes about more than just Macs on his blog Kirkville. Twitter: @mcelhearn Kirk’s latest book is Take Control of iTunes 10: The FAQ.]

Your digital music doesn't stay in one place, and it should look the same no matter where it's playing. But somehow, in all the transfers from system to system, onto and off of MP3 players, and to and from the net, the album art illustrations that should add visual cues and familiarity seem to always get lost. If you're looking to match up all your music with their album covers, read on for a quick guide to the best tools and sources for finding and locking down album art, no matter what computer you're using.

Make your album art stick

Most modern media players can grab matching album artwork from the major sources—Amazon, iTunes, or paid commercial databases—but don't do such a hot job of embedding the MP3 files themselves with the pictures, so that they always show up, whether they're in an iPod, in a different operating system, or even on your cell phone. This guide will show you, in one editor's humble opinion, the best places to download album art, and the best tools for placing it into your files for all three major systems. Let's get grabbing.

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Art sources

Here are a few good sources of downloadable album art when your media player of choice doesn't find it.

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Album Art Downloader (Windows)

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This small app covers a lot of ground, querying an array of both big-name (Amazon, Google Image search) and smaller, indie-ish sites to grab album covers. The resolution varies by the source, of course, but you can usually grab at least one 600x600 image of most any album you can think of. Grab the latest version of Album Art Downloader here; XP users may be prompted to install the .NET 3.5 framework if they haven't already.

AllCDCovers

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As Gina noted earlier this week, AllCDCovers doesn't quite live up to its name, but what it lacks in breadth, it makes up for in detail. Completists can often grab front, back, inside sleeve, and CD images from a found album, and the integration of Google Image search gives it a decent shot at finding the goods.

Find Album Art at AllCDCovers

Web-based album art library and search engine AllCDCovers just may have the missing art you've …

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AlbumArt.org

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A super-clean (and fast) source for finding album art, AlbumArt.org pulls a lot of its results from Amazon, but serious music fan Adam has cited AlbumArt.org twice as a go-to source when other sites fail.

Find Quality Album Art Fast at AlbumArt

Got a new MP3 player and decided it's time to gussy up your music library with high quality…

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Other Web Sites

Our commenters have their art-finding-site preferences, as you might've seen earlier this week. Here's a few of the sites at least one commenter vouched for—all are worth a look, if the other sources above fail you:

  • SlothRadio: Seems to catch a wider array of indie-type bands and labels.
  • Discogs.com: Also strong with the indie force, but apparently has a decent selection of foreign, or just import, discs.
  • Site-by-site test: We'd have liked to have tried out a few albums in each site mentioned, but commenter ma_xyz already did it for us. Check out his list of site performance on both an obscure and seriously mainstream disc.

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Embedding tools

Now that you've found your album art, it's time to embed it into your music files to make them as portable as possible. Here are a few tools to do that.

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Windows

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Alumnus Associate Editor Rick Broida previously covered embedding album art into your MP3s, and more than 18 months later, his chosen tool, MediaMonkey, is still the quickest and most reliable way to embed art into your music files' metadata. Even if you don't plan to use MediaMonkey as your media player, its Amazon-pulling Autotag feature and easy-to-grasp interface make an often tedious job move quickly.

Alpha Geek: Whip your MP3 library into shape, Part II - Album art

by Rick Broida

Music App That Finds Album Art And Puts Tracks In Order For MacRead more Read

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Windows Media Player and Winamp can embed files with album art as well, but through a manual process that's not quite as intuitive or automatic as MediaMonkey.

Mac OS X

Music app that finds album art and puts tracks in order for mac download

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Even if it's not your favorite media player, iTunes is the best place to pair your tunes with their proper pictures. Tamar showed us a step by step guide to getting your cover art locked into iTunes and showing up on your iPod; Here's a link to the shorter version of that method. (You will need an iTunes Store account to get album art through iTunes.)

Maximize CoverFlow on Your iPod with iTunes

With the launch of Apple's iPhone and the newer iPods, CoverFlow adds a whole new visual…

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Linux

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If you want to make sure your album art sticks in nearly any Linux-based system, EasyTAG is your best bet. There's nothing too fancy about it, and the app can't grab the art itself online, but it's easy to drag and drop your pictures for embedding in music files. It's also reasonably smart—click to add a picture to an MP3, Ogg Vorbis file, or most any other format, and the first place EasyTAG looks is in the containing folder. There's also versions for OS X and Windows that offer similar straight-forward art embedding.

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If you're a fan of media organizer Amarok, a little plug-in script called EmbedCover might work for you if you just want to add pictures to a few songs in your playlist. The script can be a little fickle, however, especially when working on multiple files. After installing and activating the script, right-click on a file in your playlist, and choose 'Do it!' from the 'EmbedCover' sub-menu.

Music App That Finds Album Art And Puts Tracks In Order For Mac Free


That's our list of tools and techniques for embedding album art—but what's your not-so-secret hook-up? How do you keep your MP3s looking shiny and cool wherever they land? Tell us your tips in the comments.

Music App That Finds Album Art And Puts Tracks In Order For Machine

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Music App That Finds Album Art And Puts Tracks In Order For Mac 2017


Kevin Purdy, associate editor at Lifehacker, doesn't like to see a blank screen staring at him when he's rocking on the go. His weekly feature, Open Sourcery, appears Fridays on Lifehacker.