How do you organize your files for AM?

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StoopKid
StoopKid's picture
Joined: November 7, 2009

I've recently started to cut up acapellas/instrumentals for use in AM and I will be using these cutups to create mashups (much like Girl Talk). I was wandering if anyone here has any good methods to organize files for this type of tuse. My desktop is getting full and I would like to have an efficient way to organize and keep tidy my sound files for AM. Any help or guidance would be greatly appreciated.

Thanks,
SK

Oh and also I was thinking about getting an external harddrive to keep all my files on for my notebook, your thoughts? :)

rooftopsonfire
rooftopsonfire's picture
Joined: June 23, 2009

Folders - organised by sample type (breaks/bass/vox etc) and then maybe subfolders with key or tempo banding?

I have a rediculous file tree just for snare drums!

External hardisk FTW - Also, BACK UP BACK UP BACK UP your work (it was worth saying three times). You gotta do this double-as-much if you're working solely from an exernal.

As they say in IT depts; it doesn't exist unless it's backed up three times in separate places.

Winslow17
Winslow17's picture
Joined: December 29, 2010

This issue has been on my mind, too. Electronic musicians working with samples and loops and tracks must create a boatload of files, and keeping them organized must quickly become a challenge.
For the Mac, there used to be programs designed specifically for managing fonts - of which many graphics designers had a similar boatload. (Now, Apple builds this function into OS X.) I wonder if there are analogous programs for music-making. I will look around, but if anyone has any pointers .....

jonah
jonah's picture
Joined: September 13, 2010

You might like iced audio's audiofinder. It's one of the only reasonably priced tools to organize audio. Personally, I just use metadata on all my files. I use automator actions for osx. I hear windows 7 is much improved in the way it handles metadata.

I also make an effort not to stockpile sounds and delete things right away if they aren't working, but since disk space is so cheap I usually back most things up on an external drive and occasionally go through them when I'd bored or something.

Winslow17
Winslow17's picture
Joined: December 29, 2010

I will ck out Audiofinder. And using metadata has occurred to me. I wonder if there'd be a way to have AM help with this, to provide a set of fields - or even our own choice of fields - for adding our own tags when we Export to Sound files, for instance.

Where and when and how, Jonah, do you add metadata? One could use the file name, I suppose, or the Spotlight comment field. Am I missing something in OS X? Quite likely.

For other kinds of files, by the way, I use a v. nifty program called Yojimbo - a sort of collect-all for text and image files. They are organizable into folders and categories and taggable as you please, making them all v. searchable. Doesn't handle sound files, however.

jonah
jonah's picture
Joined: September 13, 2010

I posted this elsewhere, might as well cross post it here too.

Quicksilver, automator action to append metadata comments to multiple files, tagbag. I like snapper2 a bit better than audiofinder for quickly chunking out audio files, but audiofinder does a lot. NameChanger. Smart folders, automator actions to add metadata to files automatically when they get sorted into a smart folder.

You might like the program default folder x. I'm demoing it now. I have a hard time spending money on "productivity" software.

Winslow17
Winslow17's picture
Joined: December 29, 2010

Thanks for the info and advice, Jonah. I had not heard of any of those programs, but they all look quite interesting. Automator's one of those things I have never seen a use for or bothered to master - nor AppleScript, for that matter.

One could, I suppose make all of one's AM files in the same key and with the same BPM, just to make them inter-useful. (My son, 12, on piano, just got a "fake book" with all songs in C. What?!)

John