
The Web holds a plethora of audio-related tools and apps. Some will help you clean your music collection of duplicates, others will tag your audio tracks properly, and some others will burn your favorite tracks to disc for you. AudioExpert is capable of performing all those tasks and then more, all under one single interface. With support for the most common audio formats and tags, this may well become the only tool you will ever need to organize and make the most of your audio collection.
This impressively extensive functionality has its tolls, though. Getting the hang of it is easy enough, but if you intend to make the most of its many features and functions, you will need to put more than just a few minutes into it. As expected, the app’s interface is full of menus, submenus, options, settings, tools, etc., trying to cover its endless possibilities in the most organized way possible. AudioExpert offers a mixture of basic audio cataloging tools and expert-oriented functions that may scare away the casual user. Actually, it is just a matter of time and of focusing on what you expected to get from the app, leaving aside those features you don’t really need.
The program can import as many music archives and as many tracks as required. It claims to have dealt with 100,000 MP3 files in a couple of hours, which is certainly impressive. While importing your music collections, the app will check for possible duplicates and will list them for you at the end of the process. It will use the MD5 hash sum, the file tags, the bit rates, the stereo modes, the track’s length, and even the sampling rate to compare your music tracks to make sure that no dupe goes unnoticed and that you always make the best-informed decisions. As a bonus, advanced users can always take a look at the frequency spectrum of a given track to check for its true quality and avoid hidden transcodes.
Tagging your collection properly is just as important, if not more. AudioExpert offers you various tag-related utilities, such as a fully-configurable filename-to-tag importer, a manual tag editor, or the possibility to connect to the most reputed online databases (Discogs, MusicBrainz, etc.) in search for the right tags, album cover and lyrics included.
AudioExpert can certainly be used by a wide variety of users, though not all of them will be able to exploit all of its possibilities fully without a steep learning curve. The high level of comprehensiveness that the app offers, together with its wide range of options and settings, turn some of its functions into full-featured apps in themselves. This is both the beauty and the challenge of AudioExpert.
v11.6.0.1317 [Sep 4, 2015]
Settings Dialog
The settings dialog was completely becoming dated. It is now clearer and also has a filter function for easy finding options
In addition, the settings have been refined for the treatment of duplicates, so now can be adjusted in greater detail, which duplicate should be assumed by default.
Compare actual bitrate
Who does not want to rely on the (easy to "counterfeiting") indicating the bit rate in the File Information, for some time now can compare the actual bit rate. With this version of the analysis area is freely configurable, so you can also examine the entire file when needed.
Archive duplicates
In the "duplicates the last import check", you now have the option of copying the identified duplicates in a folder of choice. So you can archive the recognized Doubles as a backup before the transfer run.
Datenbantools
The "Tools> Database Tools" menu was hoisted a level and is now available as a "Database Tools" directly in the menu bar
Search Best albums
This function now determine not only the best album but also the matching track number of songs
Automatic detection Compilations
Under certain circumstances, compilations were not immediately recognized during import and the title ended up mistakenly held in the Artists in the same album
Search in database
In the "Search in database" were with the menu called "Add to playlist" only the first titles possibly added merhrfach
Reproduction
If the "fade" option was not active, possibly was stopped playing between tracks
Delete empty directories
Sometimes empty directories remained, although they would actually delete them. This was caused by a "timing" problem.