Asset UPnP

How about getting Asset to only scan the files for one artist? That might help determine what’s going on.

It might help if Thruster04 expanded the directory column so we can see the entire path. How would Asset treat a single album if the tracks were stored in different directories?

It would see them as separate albums assuming the default settings were used.

If left to it’s own settings dbpoweramp will save as

Music\artist\album

Eg
Music\The Beatles\Abbey Road
Music\The Beatles\Let It Be

And, expanding
Music\The Beatles\Abbey Road\01 Come Together
Music\The Beatles\Abbey Road\02 Something

Asset will play Come Together followed by Something as long as the track number field contains the track number. The “number” in the file name has no effect if playing Album artist/album, which would be the standard choice for playback.

Would it? I haven’t tried, but I would expect it to group by album tag and ignore the directories. If you dump all tracks into one folder, it would sort out the artists and albums by the respective tags as well

This might be a stupid suggestion BUT how about installing the BubbleUPnP app and seeing how that handles things?

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How about the OP enquiring on the Illustrate (dBpoweramp/Asset) forum.
They’re the designer & developer of the software, Asset includes a data logging feature that will let the Asset people see what is actually going on, they can then tell us all what the problem is.
I suggested this a while back, but I don’t see anything yet … horse to water … but hey ho,

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I have discovered that I can point Asset at music files NOT associated with Itunes and all works fine - correct artwork and correct track sequencing. Point it at Itunes library and everything goes awry. I used Itunes on a PC years ago as a means of filling my Ipod for use on holidays and in the car but I remember having a problem and Itunes was badly corrupted. Via the internet I found a way to copy music from my Ipod into a new Itunes library on my PC and the library was completely restored. However the tracks all came back with unrecognisable names and I can see these names in Mp3tag. The “restore” created some 49 folders each containing a random number of tracks from a random number of albums and a random number of cover artworks. I am pretty sure that this was Apple trying to stop unauthorised copying of albums or at least make it inconvenient. Itunes is still able to decipher these files but the 2 UPnP servers that I have tried cannot.

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So is the iTunes folder a subfolder of your music folder? If it is and it is being indexed by Asset that is probably the cause of your issues as you’re probably not playing what you think you are. The solution will be to move your non-itunes files to another folder and have Asset index that or just get rid of the iTunes folder under your music folder

I haven’t used Itunes in years so I will move the library out of “Music”. I’m sure that is the answer.

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It did when I accidentally did it… it listed the track number as “1” for each track - it seems to use that tag to piece together an album when other fields match.

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dBpoweramp comes with a batch converter so (if you want / need to) you can convert all your music files back to Apple format to re-populate iTunes. I maintain iTunes to allow me to fill iPods for the cars, but I keep it well separated from my main music library.

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Yes do that and force a rescan in Asset and hopefully that will be you sorted

JRiver has a nice file moving/renaming feature. JRiver was able to reorganize my entire classical collection by selecting all the tracks (after testing on a few) and instructing it to move all my files into the following file structure:

G:\Music[Genre][Album Artist][Album]\

Of course, this assumes those fields are tagged properly. It also asks if it should delete now empty folders.

Do other programs have that?

Edit - just noted the posted version deletes the backslashes between the field names.

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Type two backslashes like this \\ which will then appear as one \
(Type three backslashes to see two)

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AssetUPnP has a folder view option also. But as you suggest why would you want to use it.

It’s an interesting problem. A good tag editor should help you see what’s actually going on.
I use MediaMonkey.

Or used to.

Though I hate to say it, I wonder if we will all abandon personal physical libraries of FLACs and WAVs. I have curated a collection of 4,000+ CDs into my Asset UPNP database on a Synology NAS. It took me 10 years to index everything satisfactorily. But since I subscribed to Qobuz I can get all those CDs at 24/96 instead of 16/44.1 and 70,000,000 others besides. So the NAS has not been turned on for weeks…

There are many albums not available on Qobuz or Tidal or even CD for that matter. I’ve just played one - LP only :slightly_smiling_face:

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Yes! I went to Qobuz for the Sting duets album. Couldn’t find it; used my NAS instead. But that can be because of the indexing. Maybe in a separate list under ‘Sting and Various’?!
I still happily pay a premium for Qobuz for the joy of hearing so much stuff in 24/96 :slight_smile:

And there was I hoping you were a Naim type of chap Steve!
I take it you have not gone down the Roon route?
Best
Steve (from those distant St John’s days)

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