Okay, got it. But only the duration of the program run, so you'd have to reset those each time before you used them, which is only worthwhile if you really need the feature. We could, if we were crafty, automate it by calling the Automation commands on MC and have a script run save() commands to "load it up" with some useful tools (or defaults, at least). But that sounds like a pain in the butt, again, unless you really need it.
In my case, I don't, I was curious about it as an exercise. Thanks for explaining.
In the case of Popular Music, being coherent with the Tagging Universe is important, and I think that the general consensus is to use "Bob Dylan" rather than "Dylan, Bob", simply because half of the artists names are fictional, and thus do not represent a First and Last Name - for example, "Jethro Tull" has to be under "J", even though it is a person's name, because it is fictional. And, of course, same with "Jefferson Airplane".
Of course, the flexibility of MediaCenter allows everyone to do it exactly as they like on their system...
... but then please don't upload your tags to an online database.
I actually use [Artist] as my "what I want it filed under" container. All the other fields are informational, so I fill them if I have time, but I just fill them as Firstname Lastname (which is searchable, so good enough). But, I use [Artist] to construct my Views, so that contains what I want it to contain (which is based on where I'm going to go if I'm looking for it), not what is necessarily "right". So, for example, I know sometimes Béla Fleck plays with the Flecktones, and sometimes he is solo (and sometimes he probably plays with other dudes too). I don't care. If I'm in the mood (usually) I'll copy this information into the [Band] tag, but I tag all of these as [Artist] = Fleck, Béla. Because that's how I'm going to go looking for them.
I chose the reverse name order "rule" a long, long time ago well before there were good standards for these things (and certainly before there were nice file-based databases available). And, no, I generally don't submit things like that to online databases, even though my way is better, because it would probably pollute the results.
But, I like the last-name-first rule. It makes it easier to find certain people, and sometimes I don't know or remember their first names very well (so looking up Harry Mclintock is easier because maybe I can't remember if his name is Harry or Henry or... maybe even Gary?). It does lead to gray areas, especially with things like The Del McCoury Band or George Clinton and Parliament-Funkadelic/P-Funk All Stars/Whatever He's Calling The Spaceship this Week, but I generally prefer "larger groupings" to "smaller groupings" when I'm browsing, so I usually just pick one style for a particular artist and stick with it, and if I want to "record the truth" I do it in a different tag (usually [Band] but it depends on the situation). I go by "what I know them as better" and default to the last name, first name (band suffix removed and stashed in [Band]) style if I don't know them very well.
So, The Del McCoury Band is in my Library as The Del McCoury Band, and George Clinton and all of his merry men are just called Parliament-Funkadelic, while Henry Allen & His New York Orchestra is in there as just Allen, Henry with [Band] set to "Henry Allen & His New York Orchestra".
But, that's me. To each their own, even if you're
clearly wrong.