Using iTunes as a source library for Aurender Music servers


Don't know if this is worthy of new thread, but here goes;

I have been using a computer as my principal digital music source since I discovered Apple's lossless compression in 2006.  My iTunes library has all of my 3200 ripped CDs and about 300 downloaded albums which together comprise a total of 45,000 tracks.  3,500 of these tracks are above red-book CD resolution.

I have a new Aurender N10.  I love it.  It sounds better and is easier to use than my Mac Pro (3,1) running Amarra 3.0.3.  

I continue to use iTunes to create and curate the music library on the N10's hard drive.   Since the computer and the N10 are connected by a wired ethernet, I can use Carbon Copy Cloner to maintain a mirror image of the iTunes music file hierarchy on the N10.  A update of a few new albums will complete in as little as half an hour.  

I am good at managing my library on iTunes--I have been doing it for more than 10 years.  The album artwork and liner notes are in good (pretty good) order.  Track names, album names, comments, groupings, artists, composers, genre, ratings, are all maintained carefully and consistently.  The workflow of mirroring additions and edits of my iTunes library on the N10 is quite efficient now.  I would be glad to share anything that might be helpful to other Aurender owners using this same architecture.

So here is my first question for the community:

Has anyone had success embedding the iTunes track ratings in the track files and then getting the Aurender (conductor) app to display them correctly?  The ratings are among the most valuable ways I remember the albums I really like.  (I see that Doug-scripts has a way of finding the ratings which iTunes maintains in its proprietary database and embedding them into each track's music file.)  

John Devereux
devereux
Sounds wonderful. I had a larger collection than yours on iTunes and this year I switched to Roon and Tidal. Roon is the way to go - the curating is done for you! Roon is an amazing interface. Trust me - if you try it then you will want a headless Mac mini running Roon Server and you will control it all from an iPad. The metadata is fantastic - read up on the artist or individual CD - check who played what on the album and instantly go find other artists where the musician you like also played.
Hi,

An Aurender might be on my list soon so I thought to tag this topic. Sorry, I don’t have an answer for you.

Interesting. I’ve never tagged the FAV colum as one to seek albums or songs. I’ve got about half of your library size. And nearly in every possible format and sampling rate. Sheeesh.

Would you mind cluing me in on how those 7 little stars aid in searching a library of 40K plus, quicker than a title, genre, album or artist search?

Good luck incorporating your data. I do hope it works out for ya.

Hello blindjim,

Answering blindjim: How do the ratings help me to search.

This Christmas I had the time to listen seriously to the Berlioz L'Enfance du Christ.  I have five complete versions of this beautiful work.  Two of these I have liked enough in the past to give them five stars.  This rating means the performance and its sonics are good enough for me to devote myself for the next two hours to listening to this oratorio.  

With a 5-star rating I usually add critical comments.  In this case they said that the Herreweghe performance included a superb narrator (Paul Agnew) whose performance is good enough to expand your concept of reverence.

Incidently, Aurender owners, because you are listening with your iPad in your lap, you can put the .pdf notes into iBooks and read the libretto while you listen.  There is a very slick system that drives the librettos and the notes into the Conductor app which will hopefully be illuminated more as this thread evolves.

The "heart" marking in iTunes is new so it is not populated for most of my tracks.  I plan to use it to give me a handle that finds all the desert island recordings in my library.

Filtering:  In iTunes (and presumably in Aurender) you can select, say, all of your Christmas music that has a five star rating.  This is very powerful since many Christmas records and compilations have tracks that are awful, so this selection will only play that ones that made the cut.

I hope this is helpful.

John Devereux