But I put all the instructions you need in one sentence,
and included a picture!
We could exchange a template, but it would be more work for both of us than you just configuring the view the way you want it—which is what you're going to want to do anyway. If you're concerned about messing up an existing view, create a new one using
View - Add View - Add Library View. You'll get a good start by selecting the provided
Genres template. From the drop-down menu on the header bar, change the
List Style to
Details. At this point, you should recognize the screen shot I provided. Just right-click on the column header and add whatever fields you want summarized. If you want to group by a category other than genre (e.g., the example I provided is by Style), select
Customize View and add the category.
To realize the full benefit of MC's powerful database capabilities, it's necessary to learn how to create and configure view schemes. They're so flexible, you'll quickly realize the real challenge is deciding what you want, not how to configure it. To illustrate with the question at hand... Hopefully, I've explained this well enough you'll be able to see how you can create a "Statistics View." But where you go from there is a matter of personal preference. If you really like statistics, you may want to have a view dedicated to that purpose alone. At each category (i.e., genre, style, year, artist, album), it would show the statistics for that level. On the other hand, you may be happy with just the statistics at the genre level, and decide to incorporate that into your primary view. In other words, you would use a details style for the genre category so it would show these statistics, and use a thumbnails style for other categories.
My personal preference for a primary view is a "Panes and Details" view. It precludes the display of statistics in the manner described, but it's much more powerful than a "Categories" view for selecting files based on multiple categories. In the information bar at the bottom of the screen, however, it shows the number of files matching the selected categories and their total playing time. That's quite useful for getting that information for any cross-section of the collection. For example, in seconds I can see how many "album-rock tracks from the 70's" are in my collection.