![]() ![]() ![]() It also has Mixed In Key 5.6’s proprietary “Energy” column, an “Additional Comments” column that gathers up some of the extraneous data that can appear in music files, and “Has Traktor” and “Has Serato” columns to show if a tune has or has not yet been imported into either of those programs. MetaBliss is exceptionally simple – you drag or load tunes in (it works from iTunes playlists just fine), and can immediately strip extra spacing, delete redundant v1 tags, do global or column-specific search and replace, and finally save your changes back to the files when you’re happy. One nice feature is the ability to drag a value from one cell through a load of cells, as you can do with spreadsheets. And good though iTunes is, the fact that it has no real “batch” options means it’s not good enough for the kind of “shock and awe” tag editing that DJs often want to do. It can prevent head-scratching anomalies. It keeps things nice and standard in your DJ software. ![]() So why bother? Well, having tidy metadata is good. From the makers of Mixed in Key, MetaBliss is a batch processing tag editor currently only for the Mac (a PC version is promised) that brings at least some of the features of much-loved PC staples like Mp3Tag to OSX. ![]() MetaBliss, new from Mixed In Key, is aiming to fill the gap for a decent ID3 tag editor for OSX.Īny DJ who’s ever switched from PC to Mac, and who has a decent-sized digital music collection, always ends up asking the same question at some point: “Is there not a decent ID3 tag editor for Mac?” Until now, no. ![]()
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