Hmmm... What do your song files look like? When I rip, I specify for EAC the following format: %A\%C\%N-%T
(This examples presumes ripping to wav files)... That gives me a structure where, for example, I have:
C:\..\My Music\Cash, Johnny\American Recordings\01-Delia's Gone.wav
C:\..\My Music\Cash, Johnny\American Recordings\02-Let The Train Blow The Whistle.wav
If you set up EAC with the format %A-%C-%T, you would end up with, instead:
C:\..\My Music\Cash, Johnny-American Recordings-Delia's Gone.wav
C:\..\My Music\Cash, Johnny-American Recordings-Let The Train Blow The Whistle.wav
If I "play" the first set in foobar, it would come up with the song titles (it assumes filename = song title) identified as:
01-Delia's Gone.wav
02-Let The Train Blow The Whistle.wav
But, in the second instance, it would come up with:
Cash, Johnny-American Recordings-Delia's Gone.wav
Cash, Johnny-American Recordings-Let The Train Blow The Whistle.wav
In neither case would the "Artist" or "Album" field be filled in, since WAV files don't have tags... Is the second set of files what you are seeing? I.e., no tags but artist/album?
I think I mentioned "masstagger" for foobar. If you have your files the way I do, you can select files in the library, and tell masstagger to fill in the Artist and Album fields. In the latter case, you can also tell foobar to retag from the filename itself... If you are interested, masstagger comes with the foobar installation, and I'd direct you to:
http://www.hydrogenaudio.org/forums/index.php?showtopic=12302
Don't be intimidated--look for "Guess values from filename" or something like that. Its pretty easy, although I'd do some test files before running 15000 wav files.
My alternative is ripping to ALAC and using iTunes. I start EAC and set the options for compression to iTunesEncode:
http://www.rarewares.org/files/aac/iTunesEncode46.zip
iTunesEncode is set up to create AAC files, but its pretty easy to change from AAC encoding to ALAC encoding--see the sixth message down here:
http://discussions.apple.com/thread.jspa?messageID=1358221
Because iTunesEncode actually interfaces directly with iTunes, the net result is the ripped files are automatically written into the library and the tags are automatically passed from EAC. So, if you can use CDDB to get the Artist/Album data in EAC, it will show up in iTunes...
Hope this helps...
(This examples presumes ripping to wav files)... That gives me a structure where, for example, I have:
C:\..\My Music\Cash, Johnny\American Recordings\01-Delia's Gone.wav
C:\..\My Music\Cash, Johnny\American Recordings\02-Let The Train Blow The Whistle.wav
If you set up EAC with the format %A-%C-%T, you would end up with, instead:
C:\..\My Music\Cash, Johnny-American Recordings-Delia's Gone.wav
C:\..\My Music\Cash, Johnny-American Recordings-Let The Train Blow The Whistle.wav
If I "play" the first set in foobar, it would come up with the song titles (it assumes filename = song title) identified as:
01-Delia's Gone.wav
02-Let The Train Blow The Whistle.wav
But, in the second instance, it would come up with:
Cash, Johnny-American Recordings-Delia's Gone.wav
Cash, Johnny-American Recordings-Let The Train Blow The Whistle.wav
In neither case would the "Artist" or "Album" field be filled in, since WAV files don't have tags... Is the second set of files what you are seeing? I.e., no tags but artist/album?
I think I mentioned "masstagger" for foobar. If you have your files the way I do, you can select files in the library, and tell masstagger to fill in the Artist and Album fields. In the latter case, you can also tell foobar to retag from the filename itself... If you are interested, masstagger comes with the foobar installation, and I'd direct you to:
http://www.hydrogenaudio.org/forums/index.php?showtopic=12302
Don't be intimidated--look for "Guess values from filename" or something like that. Its pretty easy, although I'd do some test files before running 15000 wav files.
My alternative is ripping to ALAC and using iTunes. I start EAC and set the options for compression to iTunesEncode:
http://www.rarewares.org/files/aac/iTunesEncode46.zip
iTunesEncode is set up to create AAC files, but its pretty easy to change from AAC encoding to ALAC encoding--see the sixth message down here:
http://discussions.apple.com/thread.jspa?messageID=1358221
Because iTunesEncode actually interfaces directly with iTunes, the net result is the ripped files are automatically written into the library and the tags are automatically passed from EAC. So, if you can use CDDB to get the Artist/Album data in EAC, it will show up in iTunes...
Hope this helps...