Fast-forward 2 years into the future: Ogg Vorbis 1.0 has been released, and I have the time and means to redo it all over again, and this time do it right. It also lacked Artist information, recording dates, and a lot of other information that I wanted, but wouldn't even fit in the MP3 tags. I usually went by BWV number because there wasn't anything else but the most basic title that I put in. It was so easy to point and click on any piece I wanted. I did not type in any titles, artists or anything that did not come from the CDDB lookup (which was non-existent for many of these CDs anyway).Īfter that I listened to this collection of music A LOT more. I did a quick and dirty job, since I really just wanted to get everything on the computer as fast as possible. So in late 2000 I spent about a month of all my free time ripping and encoding every one of the 153 CDs into MP3 format (using the lame 3.87 encoder under Linux). Clearly the best way was to have all this music on my computer in MP3 format. At first I didn't really listen to the collection as much as its price tag warranted because it was somewhat inconvenient taking the boxes down from the shelf, looking up which CD I needed, and then putting the CD in my carousel CD-player. It has always been my dream to have everything by Bach available at my fingertips for listening and/or reference. My Bach Playlist My Bach Playlist Introduction: Early in the year 2000 I bought.
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