I have a relatively large collection of songs I downloaded from YouTube, one-by-one, on my Android phone. I would like to download a lot more of the songs I like, with correct metadata and without having to manually edit the album cover art, artist, and more, on my Windows PC.

(Notes: I'd be ok with running another tool that allows altering many files, like Musicbrainz Picard. Looking at https://rentry.co/FMHYAudio/#audio-ripping, it seems I might've answered my own question, but I'm unsure. Do you know of better methods?)

  • VHS [he/him]
    hexbear
    13
    2 months ago

    Soulseek is good. It's a peer-to-peer sharing service, so you can just choose who to download from rather than waiting in a queue. You can find things in FLAC if you want it, or in various lossy qualities.

    • @shaytan@lemmy.dbzer0.com
      hexbear
      4
      2 months ago

      Until you hit a wall looking for some indie stuff and the only guy you find asks you for money lol.

      But besides a couple of those, soulseek's great, and usually people there try to go for quality, or at the very least will have the right metadata. If not, there's a couple deezer downloaders on github that work really good, and an older one hosted in the internet archive I believe.

  • u/lukmly013 (lemmy.sdf.org)@lemmy.sdf.org
    hexbear
    7
    2 months ago

    Find the albums you want to download on Tidal, copy the album URL, and paste it here: https://doubledouble.top/

    You'll get the correct metadata, including lyrics!
    But sure, there are drawbacks. Not that many people can download music at once, so you get this:

    Show

    Don't worry, it's usually not stuck, but that number just won't update.

    Alternatively, look at Soulseek. A P2P music sharing platform.

    For both cases, I recommend checking the files with Spek. It's possible someone even took a 160kbps MP3 and converted it to 24-bit 192kHz FLAC.
    You'll need to find how the spectrum looks for different lossy codecs at different bitrates to approximately see what you're looking for (specific cut-off frequencies and shelving). And sometimes it may be confusing due to how the songs are mastered.
    You decide if you care. Probably not since you were ripping songs from YouTube.