In limited experience, just about the only standard metadata was album, track title, and artist (I forget the names of the exact fields). Not only do I want more, that works terribly for classical music where the artist could be the composer Wagner, the Chicago Symphony, conductor Solti, various soloists, etc.
You might find the MusicBrainz style guidelines useful: https://musicbrainz.org/doc/Style
WRT classical: https://musicbrainz.org/doc/Style/Classical
I want to store the metadata in the files; otherwise, over the years, it will become separated and lost.
The data I want is about the music: performers, composer, etc. I would love to have the equivalent of liner notes, with details about producer, engineer, each musician, etc., but I fear that's not realistic (I have less info on my computer versions of the music than with the old analog versions.)
My use: Playing the music, discovering new music, etc. E.g., 'who produced this song? What else in my collection have they produced?'
Modern works are also often composed by someone different than the performers. The style guide listed describes fields for a separate composer(s) as well.
> The style guide listed describes fields for a separate composer(s) as well.
My impression is that only the artist or performer field (I forget the exact name) is reliably supported across music software; composer is not.
All of the information regarding licensing, streaming rights, composer, movement, and almost every piece of data regarding a song/work was included.
EDIT: Is there an established way to embed the metadata in the music file, rather than in a separate XML file?
However, some artists change names. Famously Prince, became "The artist formerly known as Prince" and then Prince again, but appears to only exist on iTunes/Apple Music as Prince.
Meanwhile, Japanese artist Yumi Arai, changed her name to Yumi Matsutoya in 1976 after getting married and exists as two separate artists under former name and current name.
If a performer changes to using a nickname, say from Robert Johnson to Bobby Johnson, should they be listed separately?
If a band keeps the same personnel, music, etc. and changes only its name? What if they change one person, and the name change is for intellectual property reasons (e.g., the departed person owns rights to the original name)? What if they also were an acoustic folk band and plug in, switching to rock? To jazz? What if everything changes - personnel, music, etc. - except for the name? What if they retroactively rename the band or music for intellectual property reasons?
... as with every attempt to specify reality.
[0] https://compote.slate.com/images/39fd61d7-da5c-4975-aad4-84e... [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Gold_Experience
The B-52's have been both "B-52's," and "The B-52's."
Prince made his name change as an artistic protest in the years before search engines. Apple is trying to encourage discoverability. Different incentives in different times. People are messy.
Famously he did become, in public media, yes. To his frustration, as he kept telling everyone to stop calling him "artist formerly known..." until he gave up and went back to Prince.
Though in public media's defense, it's very hard to reference someone who literally had no name for a period of time.
There's also artists that have many names that they perform under. The eurobeat scene is one that brings to mind immediately, since Giancarlo Pasquini aka Dave Rodgers also performs under the names "Derek Simon", "Robert Stone", "Patrick Hoolley", "Mario Ross", "Red Skins", "RCS", "Aleph", "The Big Brother" and "Thomas & Schubert".
(The ARTISTSORT field exists, but old devices, e.g. original iPods, don't know about it, so digital distributors tend to eschew the use of it, instead using the regular artist field as the ARTISTSORT field.)
Spotify has two entries, one for "Mos Def" and one for "Yasiin Bey" even though they are the same person.
It has quotation marks around "Print this Document". For no reason. That's not what quotation marks are for. That's not how anything works.
The rest of the document looks useful, though.
I'll give you, it's a little odd that it even appears on the print version, but not the worst thing in the world.
And that is something quotation marks are for.
It has quotation marks around "Print this Document". For no reason. That's not what quotation marks are for. That's not how anything works.
Oh, dear. There's a glaring style error in line 2 of this comment.
It has the punctuation on the outside of the quotation marks for no reason. That's not how punctuation works. That's not how anything works.
Protip: It should be "Print this Document." Period inside the quotation marks.
People on the internet see other people putting it on the outside, and monkey-see-monkey-do spreads. But look at any professionally typeset document, and you'll see it in its correct position.
(I hope you take this in the mirthful spirit in which it was intended. Also, Apple shouldn't have capitalized "Document," unless it was intended to be a subtitle. But I'm not sure what the purpose of that line is.)
You end a sentence with a period. The quote is within the sentence. It doesn't make sense to update the quote. A quote may be a fragment, a sentence, or multiple sentences.
Is this some kind of in-joke?
The 'interactive' version is located here: https://help.apple.com/itc/musicstyleguide/
The link "Print this Document" simply takes you to the single-page rendered version.
This happens for everything, for example Tesla for years had the domain TeslaMotors.com, and look at Musk describing him getting Tesla.com:
> "That took us 10 years to buy that Tesla.com domain," Musk said on the podcast. "That cost us like, $10 million."
> Musk said in 2018 on Twitter that it actually cost $11 million, and took an "amazing amount of effort," to get the domain name off Grossman.
So my overall conclusion from situations like that is, yes, we have to accept that while we're small, or even while we're "medium" we need to play by the rules for everyone else. If you grow up you don't have to.
Daft Punk also had to put up with lots of bullshit in their first years, you gotta presume. They've earned this little victory of having no face on the Apple Music account... :)
Creative artists tend to thrive on limitations. They use limitations to come up with inventive ways of expressing themselves despite and even through the limitations. So think about it like that, IMHO
To Apple, this is a business to keep more of their customers locked into the Applesphere. As long as they're retained, they can tax all commerce associated with these people: apps, subscriptions, payments, media, etc.
They're operating like a machine with a glazed and polished process.
Apple doesn't love music or musicians. If they did, they wouldn't pull this shit.
I read this and thought that surely, in the year of our lord 2021, there must be a song or album title or even an artist name which is all emojis, how do they handle that?
But it seems like this is a pretty standard limitation across the industry[1].
[1] https://www.forbes.com/sites/eamonnforde/2021/05/19/emoji-na...
Sadly the metadata the consumer gets doesn't end up consistent because there's fragmentation between retailers (or if we're talking 10 years ago, p2p uploaders) on how to populate id3 tags etc.
More detailed example... my friend sends me a link to their playlist .. i click it .. it starts playing then when im done listening to a few songs its time for me to say hey siri play something outside of the playlist. When I do Apple Music pops up this message saying do you want to keep the playlist queued .. with two options "keep," or "clear," what im done with playing it .. i want to hear another song without having to mess with my phone/read or understand a message while driving. Just save this playlist for me and ill go back and play it later ... horrible and dangerous UX(annoying when not driving)! Spotify is totally different and does as expected!
A better UX is just play what I asked no stupid pop up and when I say Siri start XYZ playlist it re-starts it from beginning and or Hey Siri start XYZ playlist from last played song. That is a safer UX and isnt Apple Music usage 50% in the car?
Interestingly i see im being downvoted and upvoted .. would enjoy hearing others thoughts! Had a fun arguement with a friend about this!
If your score falls below a certain threshold the time between delivery of your content to Apple and when it goes on the store is delayed because of additional quality controls applied to your content.
If you have a good score, it will go live immediately (assuming it's release date is in the past).
Lots of software development at this company was driven directly by changes to this style guide, since iTunes / Apple music were such a huge portion of revenue.