Details for this torrent 


Morcheeba - Parts Of The Process - MP3/320
Type:
Audio > Music
Files:
19
Size:
179.53 MB

Tag(s):
Morcheeba

Uploaded:
Aug 29, 2013
By:
Swiftbow



Morcheeba - Parts Of The Process (2003)

MP3/320

This is Morcheeba's 2003 "Best Of" Album.


1.  Sea

2.  Tape Loop

3.  Otherwise

4.  Blindfold

5.  Be Yourself

6.  Part Of The Process

7.  Let Me See

8.  Undress Me Now

9.  What's Your Name (Ft Big Daddy Kane)

10. Trigger Hippie

11. Rome Wasn't Built In A Day

12. Over & Over

13. What New York Couples Fight About (Ft Kurt Wagner)

14. World Looking In

15. Moog Island

16. Way Beyond

17. Never An Easy Way

18. Can't Stand It


All MP3 tracks have ID3 tags for Album, Artist, Track Titles, and order in the album.  Some other information, such as Year, Genre, and Publisher may have been added if the information was available to me.

FLAC cannot be encoded by my software in a usable fashion with tags, so you must add them yourself. I am using FreeRip right now, which does not create .cue or log files. Once I finish learning my way around EAC, I will switch over and my FLAC uploads will contain these files.


All albums will have album art included if it was available to me.

All MP3 files that I upload are encoded at TRUE 320 kbps.

All FLAC files that I upload are encoded at highest quality.  If the files seem a little large, that is why. 

If you have any problems, comments, or suggestions, let me know. 

IF YOU NEED FOR ME TO RESEED, contact me at swiftbow@yahoo.com

Enjoy, and seed, Seed, SEED!

Comments

You should check your quality control. The beginning of "Way beyond" - you can hear the CD skipping. That's just the first I discovered, who knows if any other tracks are affected.

Also going with some of your other releases which I downloaded, a lot of ID3 tags are missing.

May I suggest using Easy CD-DA Extractor (available here on TPB) as it will do FLAC -> MP3 and keep all tags. It's also a brilliant CD ripper to any format anyhows. Also use the amazing freeware "mp3tag" program to manage all your tags and check all your files in an easy way. This way you can see which tags are missing and also embed the cover art into the mp3 track. It can handle bulk tagging too. Essential tool for the MP3 activist.
Can you contact me at swiftbow@yahoo.com and let me know which other mp3 uploads you have found are missing tags? I make sure that this info goes in, and then spot-check the converted files for it as well.

I am now encoding FLAC in EAC, so the potential for quality issues with FLAC should be nil from now on. I saw a light scratch on this cd before I ripped it and so I spent an evening listening to the converted files for errors before I uploaded it, but it is entirely possible that I missed that on Way beyond. My apologies, I will re-encode via EAC and see what it can do with it. Thanks for the heads up.
I hear the skipping you mentioned, I also heard it in the FLAC upload I put on here. I will comment on that torrent to warn people off of it and fix it. Thanks again for the heads up.
I have gone back and checked all of my MP3 uploads, and they all have tags. I cannot find the torrents that you are referencing, unless you meant some of the FLAC uploads. I know that my software (I am using EAC for FLAC now) at the time did not tag FLAC rips, and noted that in the description of every torrent. All of my MP3 uploads, however, are tagged.
Actually I downloaded the following release from you:

Heart - Greatest Hits (1985-1995)

That was missing the ARTIST ID3 and the YEAR ID3 tag. I had to add in "Heart" in that field and the year of release for all the files. As I suggested, if you use MP3tag after you have done all the converting/encoding, it offers a quick and easy way to view all your files and see which tags are missing. Despite its name, mp3tag also support FLAC and many other popular auido formats. By writing in one field, it populates it to all the files. So it is quick and easy. If you're into your music organising/managing and I presume you are because you're posting your FLAC and MP3 releases, then it is a tool you should definitely have. Not only does it support mass ID3 tag adding/removing but it also allows you to embed the cover art into the mp3 file which is much more efficent than just having the jpg image in the folder directory and with cover art not embedded into the file, it just shows as blank when uploaded to things like iPods/iPhones/iPads/mp3 players so it is better to have the images embedded. It also allows mass renaming of files so you can have the mp3 filenames exactly how you want them. It is a highly customisable program that will do whatever you want it to do.

Whenever I download music off the net/torrents/file lockers, before they get added into my music hard drive, I always pass them through mp3tag. I strip out unnecessary tags eg. COMMENTS, WWW, ENCODED BY. Also I can see if for example they claim a mp3 release is "320 kbps" - then at a glance I can see all the files and what bitrate they have rather than playing them individually which would be time consuming. Also sometimes some uploaders claim an album is 320 kbps and actually 8 of 11 songs are but 3 files are 128 kbps or 192 so you can see in this case the album was clearly put together and not ripped from a single source. I also like to rename the files to my own liking (The way the scene does) which is never the way any independent uploader does, so a simple set of rules in mp3tag has it always renaming files the way I want. Eg:

01. Tonight (Rawhide Remix).mp3
02. Tonight (Elevation Dub).mp3

Becomes:

01-tiesto-tonight_(rawhide_remix).mp3
02-tiesto-tonight_(elevation_dub).mp3

Give MP3tag a chance, you wont regret it! Anyhows... how's that Morcheeba re-rip coming along? ;)
@ DimsumDynum:

Thanks for the reply. Regarding the Heart Album, I added it to my iTunes library to check for the tags (when they are not present, they get thrown in by filename only and I have to go to the bottom of the list and add it all in), but they went in fine and all of the information appeared as it should. That was for the MP3 upload. The FLAC uploads, I know that they do not have tags and I noted that in the description. I have begun using EAC for FLAC (and adding the album art there as well, so that it is also embedded, although I still throw a jpeg file in with the music out of habit) so hopefully that will no longer be a problem with FLAC. This was my first or second FLAC upload using EAC, let me know what you think. http://thepiratebay.sx/torrent/8866241/Nine_Inch_Nails_-_Year_Zero_(FLAC)

I will check out the programs you mentioned, it may be awhile before I begin employing them as I like to be sure that I understand how to use them before I begin releasing torrents into the ether with major errors in them, but I WILL check them out.

The Morcheeba re-rip is not coming along at all, EAC just doesn't like that little scratch, though it has successfully ripped some discs that appeared to my eye to be in terrible condition. It must be in a critical spot or just at the wrong depth or angle. Because I like Morcheeba, and because I am determined to correct my mistake (I really hate that I missed that error, and uploaded a rotten torrent), I have ordered a new copy of the album, used but guaranteed scratch-free, and am waiting for it to arrive. It is coming from the UK, so I expect it at the end of the month. Once it arrives I will rip it, triple-check it, and upload it in FLAC and MP3. If you want me to email you when I get this dine just shoot me a line at swiftbow@yahoo.com and I will let you know when it is up. Thanks again for the heads up, it gave me a chance to stop seeding that torrent and add a comment on the other one to warn folks of before they got disappointed.

The folks here on TPB who have taken the time to upload quality torrents have allowed me to build a music collection that would have cost me tens of thousands of dollars if I had had to pay $0.99 for each song, and so it is my pleasure to rip my own CD collection and upload it for others to enjoy where there is not already a healthy torrent for that album/format. That's why I do it. To that end, it is important to me to upload high-quality content, and that's why I am taking the time to familiarize myself with the various means of getting music from the disc to the ether in the best shape possible. I appreciate the advice. --Swiftbow--