![]() XO and Atlas are also drum machines so they're not so cooperative. Once I've found a sample in Sononym, I can right-click or use the shortcut Alt-Shift-C to copy the path to the file, then I can paste this in Media Explorer's address bar for auditioning. But while I use Sononym and XO to find samples, I still rely on Media Explorer to audition it in context because it's extremely powerful. As previously mentioned, you can manually tag and search that way too. With media browsers you need to know where it is and you can help by organizing your media into a folder hierarchy that makes sense to you. It's cutting-edge territory and it's prone to error so I doubt any DAW would implement such an immature technology at this point.įinding samples is but one facet of a media browser. But no DAW media browser does any of this. XLN XO, Algonaut Atlas, and Sononym currently analyze and classify the audio. Granted, it's not doing audio identification, but ADSR Sample Browser doesn't either it's completely filename based (they are planning on audio identification though). Now you can search for multiple tags in the filter box like "#fav #lofi kick" and it'll drill down. I highly suggest you namespace your tags, as searching for a "kick" tag will also list any file with "kick" in its name (that aren't necessarily kicks). Now you can add tags to any item in this database! ![]() ![]() Right-click on a folder root and choose "create new database". You can do this if you create a media database. Either way, you can use tagging tools to note title, artist, album, year, genre, and comment.īut you probably meant custom tags. However, on Windows currently this works only for WAV files. If you create a media database, metadata tags (BWF, ID3, RIFF) are supposed to be detected and made available in the extra columns. ![]()
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