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BaD 2017.5: music man.


On 02/06/2017 at 06:14 PM by Julian Titus

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You will have to pry my physical media from my cold, dead hands. My cold, dead hands, goddamn you! Of course, that’s not to say that having a huge collection of books, comics, movies, games, and music isn’t incredibly frustrating to manage sometimes, because it is. It totally is, especially when you move.

I moved almost a year ago. I had rented a house with my retired mother for almost eight years, until her death in 2015. It’s only my second time being on my own, and I’ve been determined to have a cleaner and more organized space than I did at that house. Looking back, I think I was so frustrated with myself for not being able to take care of things on my own and having to rely on my mother’s help that it reflected in how poorly I kept up with cleaning and organizing. I also only had a bedroom and the guest room, so for almost a decade my games, books, and music were packed away.

One of the big accomplishments of mine recently involved me ripping all of my CDs onto my laptop. Every damn one of them. I can’t tell you exactly how many discs that was. All I can tell you is that it was a multi-week ordeal, with many days of me loading disc after disc into my computer for hours on end. While I could never truly discard my CDs, I did make the painful but necessary decision to transfer the discs into a large CD binder. I kept the booklets when possible and threw out the cases, which freed up a ton of room in my game room closet, which is reaching a critical mass. I did keep my plethora of video game and anime soundtracks intact, but I think they only number about forty or so albums.

It's been great finally having all my music in one place. The CD player in my old car broke years ago, and my new car doesn’t have one, so I’ve been only using my iTunes purchases and a handful of ripped CDs from a long time ago. I now have access to over five thousand songs, and I’m enjoying listening to entire albums again. As I write this, I’m listening to Phantom Moon by Duncan Sheik. I haven’t heard that album in seven or eight years, easily. I put the song “Yeah, Whatever” by Splender into the most recent episode of Nerds Without Pants because a song from their second (and sadly, last) album popped up on my phone and I remembered how much I love that band.

The drawback of ripping everything into iTunes, of course, is the rather haphazard way it chooses to organize music. Beyond breaking up albums because some songs are done by different artists, I’ve run into issues where the wrong artwork pops up (the first Black Mages album has art for a band called Black Swede), albums with multiple discs are separated because iTunes chose to use different artist names between discs, and about half of my soundtracks are only displayed in Japanese, so I don’t know what they are until I click on a track.

Those annoyances aside, I felt a large weight come off me when I stored that huge CD binder in the closet, and writing is more enjoyable now that I have all of my music to choose from for background noise and inspiration. 


 

Comments

Super Step Contributing Writer

02/06/2017 at 07:02 PM

I feel your pain. It took me forever to get around to downloading a good portion of my CDs onto my iPod Nano and when I finally did, the process took forever. 

I really do need to listen to more Splender and see if I like their other stuff as much.

If you can believe it, I have never downloaded a single song illegally. There was a period of maybe a month or two where I emulated games, but then stopped and went back to just using questionable websites and streaming services for games and TV shows I didn't have access to. Now I'm back to being 100% on the up and up. But music? I have a digital-only library consisting of songs I can count on my fingers, a few freebies, and the rest is CDs that may or may not have made it to my iPod Nano (which I only have cause my mom won some contest while I was in high school). All of it was obtained legally. Probably not something that should be a badge of honor, but given that illegal downloading has become more or less mainstream, I'm oddly proud of it. 

I wish I could say I still shared your enthusiasm for always having physical copies of things, but the PS Store and Steam have blown a hole in my integrity there. The prices and convenience are just too shiny when I see a sale. I still buy major games on Blu Ray, and I'll be getting Horizon: Zero Dawn in physical form, but I've caved to buying things like Withcer III and Rise of the Tomb Raider digitally. 

One thing that's softened me is the though that if I have to install/reinstall a game to play it even if I have the disc, do I necessarily 100% own the game just because I bought the physical copy, or is there still a bit of "you're f*ed if this network ever goes down" inherent to both options now?

Catherine Hauser Staff Alumnus

02/06/2017 at 07:35 PM

Most of my iTunes music is listed in Japanese that I cannot read. It is unfortunate, but always a surprise what comes on next! 

goaztecs

02/06/2017 at 09:30 PM

First congrats on finally getting your music in one place. As someone who had to do that process a couple of times it is a pain, but once its all there, it feels good. A couple of tips is during the ripping process before you start (you can do this after as well) is to use the Album Artist section of the of the tagging. This is a life saver for soundtracks, and compilations. I use the generic Various Artists tag. Also when some albums will just refuse to be together click on the compilation tag and that will usually bring them together. Also for album art when iTunes can't find one or it's the wrong one, I always Google name of the album album art. From that point I just look for anything that is at minimum 500x500. 

Media binders have been the perfect place for my CDs because I have them arranged by genre books. I get rid of the jewel cases but I keep the CD insert, and the booklets. The only ones I keep are the paper cases, the multidisc or any cases that are special like the thin CD singles. 

Julian Titus Senior Editor

02/06/2017 at 11:00 PM

Thanks for the tips! I didn't know you could do that stuff!

goaztecs

02/07/2017 at 09:09 PM

No problem. I forgot to mention that the Album Artists section also works when you have an individual artist's album but they do a lot of songs with other people. Also using the Smart Playlist feature is real useful epscially if you like making playlists based on groupings, years, etc.  

KnightDriver

02/07/2017 at 01:04 AM

I keep my cds after ripping them, but I recycle the boxes and inserts and put the discs in binders. For vinyl, I'll rip them and then donate them to goodwill. Can't keep boxes of vinyl around anymore. Way too heavy and space consuming. 

Matt Snee Staff Writer

02/07/2017 at 10:10 AM

I've started a vinyl collection... and it's taking over my room.  It's worth it!  :)

Ranger1

02/07/2017 at 12:43 PM

After not having a turntable since forever, I finally gave up on ever getting one and gave all my vinyl, including two medium sized Uhaul storage boxes of allbums that had been my mom's to my boss, who has an incredible audio setup. It freed up a ton of closet space and I stopped feeling vaguely guilty about never getting around to getting a turntable. I do have my CD collection half-way organized in a really nice pine CD tower, but the company I bought it from went out of business before I could buy a second one and organize the rest. But they're stored in little wooden CD crates that I can stack and turn into a CD storage area when I finally get my butt in gear. Which I have a feeling will be soon, as the dog has really been great for my mental well-being and I'm actually looking forward to getting rid of the clutter rather than dreading and avoiding it like I had been for the last couple of years.

And I hear you on the physical vs digital thing I prefer physical, because then I know it's mine.

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