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How do you digital guys deal with your library/track flow? (too many tracks?)
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Woony
I think everyone that has ever played with software will know this, because there are no restrictions you end up with a billion tracks in your library, a lot of which you never use but you totally gotta have them anyways because they'll work in that one specific instance.

Basically, how do you find the tracks you really want to play next among all the stuff in your library? I'm finding it hard to "keep the flow". I sort my tracks after BPM and a lot of times I'll play something only to realize the track that would really fit was a hundred tracks away in the last.
discobiscuit
I just type a * in front of my bangers if i need to find a good track quick i just type * and sort by bpm and mix it in.
paulversuspaul
Here is a suggestion:

create sub directories. So Lets say you have a music file. in that file I have arranged tracks into different folders based on keys. When I go into the key folder, lets say A Minor, I then have 3 different folders labelled Twilo, Amnesia, and Renaissance. Now i decided to label them based on clubs as it was way easier for me to think of songs attached to this. What i mean is that the twilo label is basically anything banging, amnesia is anything really trancey or synth heavy, and renaissance is stuff more danceable and more groovy. then tracks in there are sorted by bpm. for you since you mainly play techno you would probably label the folders different but same concept. Even with a large music collection by the time you get to say a track with 130bpm thats a minor and is banging and hence in the twilo section your options should be limited to about 15 tracks at most. Basically the sub folders in the key folder should be able to divide your music evenly in three folders. You can increase those folders as well. But you really have to spend some time thinking about how you think of an individual track.
Looney4Clooney
i use an audio manager called soundminer .Granted it wasn't made for djing but it allows you to imbed meta data into wav and aiff. It was designed for sound designers with millions of files.

A simplified version is soundminder. The meta data is not printed to the file so you have to maintain the library from corruption ie doing backups.
Woony
quote:
Originally posted by paulversuspaul
Here is a suggestion:

create sub directories. So Lets say you have a music file. in that file I have arranged tracks into different folders based on keys. When I go into the key folder, lets say A Minor, I then have 3 different folders labelled Twilo, Amnesia, and Renaissance. Now i decided to label them based on clubs as it was way easier for me to think of songs attached to this. What i mean is that the twilo label is basically anything banging, amnesia is anything really trancey or synth heavy, and renaissance is stuff more danceable and more groovy. then tracks in there are sorted by bpm. for you since you mainly play techno you would probably label the folders different but same concept. Even with a large music collection by the time you get to say a track with 130bpm thats a minor and is banging and hence in the twilo section your options should be limited to about 15 tracks at most. Basically the sub folders in the key folder should be able to divide your music evenly in three folders. You can increase those folders as well. But you really have to spend some time thinking about how you think of an individual track.


I don't really sort after keys. I don't really think it matters when playing techno. Most pros don't really seem to give a either.

As for "style folders", you know, I've tried but my thought process isn't really "I need a dubby track now" and more like "well, let's see what we have here" "ah, this'll work".
Adam420
quote:
Originally posted by Woony
I don't really sort after keys.



You'd be surprised.
jdat
There's really no trick then to really knowing your tracks but beyond that romantic notion ( ;) ) you have tools that can help.

In the digital realm, you have to find a system that suits you and stick to it.
Any of the following could work you pick and choose:
-monthly playlists for newer releases with your fav tracks
-playlists geared at certain moods/types of sets
-typing keywords in track comments which will help with your searching
-custom genres(rename the genres given by the stores, as they are often too general or completely wrong)
-etc, etc...

The most important thing is to do this early on as having to play catchup with your whole library can be a real pain :clown:

And fyi a lot of djs use itunes for doing general file management, in conjonction with other apps that help with tagging.
clay
if playcount > x and rating < 7 then archive

x would depend on how often you dj really. like you shouldnt play a track for 10 weeks in a row.

in addition have a classic folder with only 9+ rated tracks and a filler folder for those anonymous early hour tracks.
Dykes_on_Jay
Monkey in a tuxedo smoking cigars.
itsamemario
:haha: :haha:

djdk
quote:
Originally posted by jdat
The most important thing is to do this early on as having to play catchup with your whole library can be a real pain :clown:


^^ this, I've given myself 18 months to finish sorting out my library, its a ing mammoth task...

If you use Traktor I can't recommend this bit of software enough

http://www.tspotter.net/version-2

Allows you to sort out all your tags and cover art by pulling data out of beatport and discogs and create some quite clever smart playlists directly into your collection.
Looney4Clooney
you have to adjust the key to some index like 140 or 128. Otherwise it is meaningless. So if all tracks were at the same tempo, what would their key be.
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