MP3 Audiobook Tag Editor: Batch Rename & Tagging Tips
Why use an MP3 audiobook tag editor
- Consistency: Correct tags ensure audiobooks sort and display properly across players.
- Searchability: Accurate metadata (title, author, narrator, chapter) makes finding books easy.
- Compatibility: Proper tags and file naming reduce playback issues on devices and apps.
Key tags to set
- Title — track or chapter title.
- Album — audiobook title (use same for all chapters).
- Artist — author.
- Album Artist — narrator or publisher (helps grouping).
- Track Number / Total Tracks — chapter order (use leading zeros, e.g., 001/120).
- Disc Number / Total Discs — for multi-disc releases.
- Genre — e.g., Audiobook.
- Year / Original Release Date — optional but useful.
- Comment — edition notes, source, purchase info.
- Cover Art — embedded image (minimum 300×300; 600–1400px preferred).
Batch renaming best practices
- Standardize filename pattern: Use a clear template, e.g.,
Author – Book Title – Disc 01 – 001.mp3 - Use leading zeros: Ensure correct sort order (001, 002…).
- Keep filenames filesystem-safe: Avoid special characters like /: * ? “ < > |.
- Include track and disc fields: Match tags to filenames for consistency.
- Preview before applying: Most editors offer a dry-run—use it to catch errors.
Tagging workflow (recommended steps)
- Gather all files into one folder per audiobook.
- Add or replace cover art once (apply to all files).
- Set Album = full audiobook title for every file.
- Set Artist = author, Album Artist = narrator/publisher.
- Fill Track Number and Total Tracks with leading zeros.
- Fill Disc Number if needed.
- Add Year, Genre, and Comment as applicable.
- Run batch rename to apply consistent filenames based on tags.
- Verify in your target player/app on a test device.
Tools that support batch editing (examples)
- Dedicated tag editors: MP3Tag, TagScanner.
- Audiobook managers/players: MusicBee, foobar2000 (with plugins).
- Commercial apps: Tag&Rename, MediaMonkey.
Troubleshooting tips
- If chapters play out of order, check track numbers and leading zeros.
- If cover art doesn’t show, embed the image into each file rather than relying on external files.
- For long audiobooks, split into discs or use multi-disc tags to avoid player limits.
- Keep a backup before mass changes.
Short checklist
- Folder per audiobook
- Album set for all files
- Leading zeros on track numbers
- Cover art embedded
- Filenames match tag pattern
- Backup before batch operations
If you want, I can generate a filename template and tag-mapping script for a specific audiobook (provide author, title, total tracks).
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