This on-line-image is my basic source/method and would probably work with other software. For album art, I find an album image on line, save it to my desktop, and then in Zune, I right-click the album's absent or wrong-art image, then click Edit and the 'CHANGE IMAGE' button, copying the saved image. For edit needs, I, again, use Zune to edit. Zune still finds info for standard albums, but not for rare or some newer albums. I still use 'Find Album info' for albums when the tags are missing/missed, erroneous, or otherwise not what I want.
Zune rips album art accurately for 90 percent of my rips. Second, I copy all my ~70GB of owned music to SD cards installed on my daily Lumia 950, and a Sony XZ1 Compact that is my just-in-case backup and a next-regular music player running mostly VLC because it plays, like Groove, my lossless WMA files and, I use Zune to edit every music tag. In addition to album reviews and news, these blogs provide a look at new music technologies and trends that are changing the way the music business operates. Again, FWIW, for some for others, the basic image/copying approach probably has broader application.įIRST, I still use Zune on a Windows 7 Intel NUC to rip CDs and organize my owned music, on which I rely daily, especially since I cancelled my Spotify Premium subscription last month. It's antiquated and probably directly impossible for others, but it works. Delayed response: I regularly use A VERY ROUND-ABOUT method for adding album art, FWIW.