How can I make this appear as one album in iTunes? I've tried options with the "part of a compilation" checked and unchecked. Under "get info" I have made sure that the "album" name is the same for all songs. I have forced information like track 1 of * for several songs. I can't get anything to work for iTunes to show my compilation as a single album. Is this possible?

As you suggest, the album name needs to be the same and one way of ensuring that is to copy your chosen title from one song to all the rest, thereby eliminating typing errors. Assuming there are different artists for some or all of the songs, the Album Artist field needs to have "Various Artists" in it and the Part Of A Compilation needs to be set as "Yes".


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From your screenshot it seems that you have the individual artists' names in the Album Artist field - I'd suggest changing this so that the value is "Various Artists" or similar - the important thing is that this value needs to be the same for all the tracks that you're trying to put into one "album".

As mentioned by myself and hhgttg27, the Album Artist must say Various Artists, but in your screenshot, it shows Daryl Worley, who is only one of the artists and Brad Paisley as another artist in the other screenshot. For a compilation album, the artist is in the Artist field, while Various Artists is in the Album Artist field.

Also as hhgttg says, it would be far easier to simply put all these songs into a Playlist. Then you wouldn't have to spend time changing the Album or the Album Artist metadata. You can't (of course) add one piece of artwork to a Playlist, but it seems like a lot of work changing all the album titles etc. just to add unique artwork to all of a Playlist, when those songs retain their original artwork even when in a Playlist.

No, that isn't what I've said. If the album was already a compilation then you would set the new track as a compilation too. You should give the new track the same artist, album artist, album, sort artist, sort album artist, sort album as the album you want to link it to. You would normally add a track number one higher than the highest track currently on the device. You might also want to set the total track count and disc number and count to make them consistent.

If iTunes shows multiple instances of an artist or an album then what generally works is to select all related tracks and use Get Info to add say a trailing X to each of the fields that the tracks should have in common:

Use the songs view and display the fields Album, Sort Album, Album Artist, Sort Album Artist, Artist and Sort Artist side by side so you see whether or not it is appropriate to edit Artist and if sort values could be causing any further problems. See Grouping tracks into albums for more help if required.

The term compilation can be used for an album of tracks by different artists, or an anthology of tracks by one artist taken from different periods of their career. The Gracenotes CDDB database which iTunes can use for track information often sets the compilation flag in both cases, but it is generally only useful in iTunes in the former case, where each track has a distinct artist. In particular the flag can be useful for older Apple devices like iPod classic that don't read the album artist field when deciding what tracks should be linked together as an album.

If it isn't a compilation then set part of a compilation to false for all tracks of the album. If it is a compilation then set part of a compilation to true. Either way the setting should be consistent across an album, including any additional tracks that you want to link up to it. A common album title and album artist are normally enough to link things together but consistency may also be required for other properties.

I see that the heart has been completely removed, but there is now nothing in place. Now, looking at any album, it appears with no markings as is. So, all of the work previously done selecting specific songs from albums is not visible.

the reason is that the heart is a plus now so if your on IOS you will experience the plus or if your on any computer device you will not have the plus problems but on any computer device you have to hover over the songs and it will show the heart and hitting the heart it will go green and will show without disappearing. the photos are the same song but what it looks like on the computer

This was one of the worst updates on Spotify recently. Not having the option of seeing the songs I've already liked doesn't make any sense. I just don't understand why I can't simply choose between having that or not. After all, as a premium user, I'm paying for this service.

I have had this issue off and on since FEBRUARY!! It is sooooo frustrating to open an album or playlist and have no clue what I have already liked. It is especiialy frustrating when searching for new music on a new playlist, or when playing the discover weekly playlists because it is impossible for me to tell what I have already liked by looking at the playlist. I have to go into my own liked songs and see there if I already have something like, or like the song again only to have the playlist menu pop up. BEYOND FRUSTRATING. The worst part is there were 2 times my like icons came back to playlists and albums,. but were subsequently taken away AGAIN. I can't believe I have been dealing with this horrible issue all year. It's insane.

If this is a new feature, why is the experience not unified across all devices? For example, on my Desktop I can still see liked songs if any in as album/playlist as opposed to when on mobile! Cherry on top: this feature keeps appearing and disappearing as if with every other update!! Very close to just switching platforms.

From there, you need to use your ears to account for any tonal differences, and intentional creative differences with different types of arrangements so they feel natural. Songs that are brighter can sound and feel louder than songs that are darker and more bass heavy.

The album was the dominant form of recorded music expression and consumption from the mid-1960s to the early 21st century, a period known as the album era.[1] Vinyl LPs are still issued, though album sales in the 21st-century have mostly focused on CD and MP3 formats. The 8-track tape was the first tape format widely used alongside vinyl from 1965 until being phased out by 1983, being gradually supplanted by the cassette tape throughout the 1970s and early 1980s; the popularity of the cassette reached its peak during the late 1980s before sharply declining during the 1990s. The cassette had largely disappeared by the first decade of the 2000s.

Most albums are recorded in a studio,[2] although they may also be recorded in a concert venue, at home, in the field, or a mix of places. The time frame for completely recording an album varies between a few hours to several years. This process usually requires several takes with different parts recorded separately, and then brought or "mixed" together. Recordings that are done in one take without overdubbing are termed "live", even when done in a studio. Studios are built to absorb sound, eliminating reverberation, to assist in mixing different takes; other locations, such as concert venues and some "live rooms", have reverberation, which creates a "live" sound.[3] Recordings, including live, may contain editing, sound effects, voice adjustments, etc. With modern recording technology, artists can be recorded in separate rooms or at separate times while listening to the other parts using headphones; with each part recorded as a separate track.

Album covers and liner notes are used, and sometimes additional information is provided, such as analysis of the recording, and lyrics or librettos.[4][5] Historically, the term "album" was applied to a collection of various items housed in a book format. In musical usage, the word was used for collections of short pieces of printed music from the early nineteenth century.[6] Later, collections of related 78 rpm records were bundled in book-like albums[7] (one side of a 78 rpm record could hold only about 3.5 minutes of sound). When LP records were introduced, a collection of pieces or songs on a single record was called an "album"; the word was extended to other recording media such as compact disc, MiniDisc, compact audio cassette, 8-track tape and digital albums as they were introduced.[8]

An album (Latin albus, white), in ancient Rome, was a board chalked or painted white, on which decrees, edicts, and other public notices were inscribed in black. It was from this that in medieval and modern times, album came to denote a book of blank pages in which verses, autographs, sketches, photographs and the like are collected.[9] This in turn led to the modern meaning of an album as a collection of audio recordings issued as a single item.

The first audio albums were actually published by the publishers of photograph albums. Single 78 rpm records were sold in a brown heavy paper sleeve with a large hole in the center so the record's label could be seen. The fragile records were stored on their sides. By the mid-1920s, photo album publishers sold collections of empty sleeves of heavier paper in bound volumes with stiff covers slightly larger than the 10" popular records. (Classical records measured 12".) On the paper cover in small type were the words "Record Album." Now records could be stored vertically with the record not touching the shelf, and the term was applied to the collection.[citation needed] 0852c4b9a8

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