The digital world is really not set up for classical music. Everything is a "song," and "songs" you download have names like "1 Allegro" and "2 Adagio." Unless I renamed tracks I would have several hundred of each of these, and it would be impossible to tell them apart. One problem is that most online databases use the "Artist" field for the composer, although this is not consistent. So, where do the performers go? The other, and perhaps larger, issue is that the majority of classical pieces have multiple movements, the origin of the "1 Allegro" problem. Even worse is that long works without movements are often broken up into very small chunks with names along the lines of "Five measures after Number 53." When I first started ripping CDs I did not let this bother me; the scrambling of movements was kind of fun, or so I pretended. But when the movements were forty seconds long, or when "Five measures after Number 53" began and ended in medias res with cymbal crashes, the novelty wore thin. I tried using the cue track function to join tracks, but honestly, this is not ideal.
After a while I developed a system: I would rip CDs in Media Center temporarily, load them into Audacity to "splice" them, then export them from Audacity in whatever format I wanted (FLAC or OGG). Then I would import these into MC, remembering to re-do the analysis function since the analysis that was correct for one movement would not be correct for the entire piece. Finally I would delete the individual movements from my computer. A rather time-intensive process.
Then I started using Any Video Converter software for various DVD functions (e..g., subtitling), and discovered that this software has a "rip as one file" function for CDs. I started using this, and it seems to work more or less okay, and one has many options as to codec and bitrate. I suspect that the quality may not be as good as on MC, one reason being that Any Video Converter rips and encodes all at once. I also wonder if their codecs are up to date. (This on top of other concerns I have about that company and its software which I will not go into here.)
This is all to say that in my opinion a sophisticated, high-end "rip as one file" function (as opposed to the current cue track function) would be a very valuable addition to MC21, particularly for those of us who listen primarily to classical music.