Tag Archive for 'music'

The Radiohead Experiment Continues

The Radiohead NUDE Remix Contest Well, ask and ye shall receive. It appears that Radiohead is continuing the experiment it started with the release of “In Rainbows” by releasing one of their songs’ source tracks. The band has released five “stems” to the song “Nude” (one for each of the bass, voice, guitar, strings/fx and drums) for their fans to remix and upload to the site - they’re even releasing a Garageband source file for the track to ease the remixing process.

It’s an interesting experiment, but the price point seems a bit off - $6 for all of the tracks! And the terms indicate you have no rights whatsoever, even to the remix you create. I’m not sure how this will be received, but I’ll be watching with interest. Maybe if it’s successful, the labels will open up the back catalogs, drop the price point, and offer some additional licensing options.

Exporting iTunes Playlists to Tivo

This is a little thing that’s been bugging me since we got our TiVo a while back, but I never got around to solving it - exporting my music playlists from iTunes to TiVo. TiVo’s jukebox interface is simply horrendous, so playlists are an absolute must, unless you like scrolling through pages of your music collection. iTunes makes matters worse in that it doesn’t allow you to export M3U-formatted playlists, the format TiVo requires.

Sigh. A little shell scripting and awk is all that’s required to resolve this problem in short order. Here’s an awk script called m3u-ify.awk to convert an iTunes playlist (exported as plaintext) to an M3U playlist:


BEGIN {
FS = "\t"
print "#EXTM3U"
}
{
if (match($27, /\.mp3/))
{
time = $8
name = $27
location = $27

# Figure out the location from the absolute location
# that iTunes exports. Note that we remove the '- ' from
# the location, which iTunes seems to add erroneously.
# Using 'sub' is not ideal, but gensub seems flakey in
# my version of gawk, otherwise I'd use the following:
# location = gensub(/D:\\Music\\\(.*\\.*\\[0-9]*\) -\(.*\)\.mp3/, “\\1\\2″, “g”, location)
sub(/D:\\Music\\/, “”, location)
sub(/ - /, ” “, location)

# Find the name of the song - this regex is giving
# me problems in Cygwin with gawk, so I coded an
# alternate way to get to the normalized song name
# name = gensub(/D:\\Music\\.*\\.*\\[0-9]* - \(.*\)\.mp3/, “\\1″, “g”, name)
sub(/D:\\Music\\.*\\.*\\/, “”, name)
sub(/\.mp3/, “”, name)
sub(/[0-9]* - /, “”, name)

print “#EXTINF:”time”,”name
print location
}
}

Note that my music collection is located in D:\Music (which needs to be stripped out of the file location to create the M3U file) - you will have to alter this script if to the location of your iTunes music folder.

To use the script, you’ll need awk installed on your machine (for those of you using Windows, you might try grabbing a copy of Cygwin) . To convert a playlist to M3U:

  1. Select a playlist in iTunes, export it as a text-formatted playlist (input.txt) to a folder containing the above script
  2. Open a shell prompt, go to the folder where you saved the text-formatted playlist
  3. Run awk -f m3u-ify.awk input.txt > output.m3u

You’ll now have an M3U-formatted version of your playlist. If you really want to be fancy, export all your playlists at once, and then generate a batch shell script to process them all at once by running ls -1 *.txt |sed -e 's/\(.*\)\.txt/awk -f m3u-ify.awk \"\1.txt\" > \"\1.m3u\" /g'>batch.sh. This will generate a shell script called batch.sh that will process all the text playlists in once go.

Note: I point TiVo Desktop to my iTunes folder directly - I’m not sure if this affects file location specified in the M3U or not. Your mileage may vary.