The software has its own MusicBrainz Picard database and once you import your music library to the software, it would automatically start a scan to mark out songs and albums whose tags need editing. Note: The Download button on the Product Information page will download the software to your system. The software supports a number of audio formats including MP3, OGG, MP4, Vorbis, WMA, FLAC and many others. The days of messed-up MP3 files are long gone, thanks to babies like this. Mp3tag program that MP3 collectors should have on their PC by default. They will even add your tags as well, courtesy of Amazon. There’s no need to go searching for album art as MP3tag will do it for you. If you like it, you can click “OK” and it will all be automatically inserted for you. By entering search terms in the box provided, Mp3tag will go to the source (such as Amazon) and bring back the relevant tags and album art for you. The features go on: Generate playlists, generate HTML, RTF or CSV reports showing a list of all the files you currently have in MP3tag, as well as support for iTunes-specific tags like media type or TV Show settings.The jewel in the crown, as far as I’m concerned, is MP3tag’s ability to search external sources such as Amazon USA, Amazon Germany, and two other sources called Discogs and Musicbrainz. MusicBrainz Picard supports numerous audio file formats including mp3, WAV and OGG file formats.
It focuses on an album based tagging style, instead on track based tag editing pattern commonly seen in other audio taggers. If you did it by hand individually, you’d be lucky to do one file every 30 seconds, never mind all 12 at once. MusicBrainz Picard is a free, open source and cross-platform audio file metadata editor written in Python. Highlighting all the files at once, I was able to search for the tags and album art, add it and save it all in just under 30 seconds. But if you use it right, batch editing can make all the difference.