Hello and thanks for your help with this, as I find my way with JRiver (which I am really liking).
I have only done the conversion for part of my dsf music library and want to get the process straight before I proceed.
I converted a selection of dsf files to flac, using the option, “replace original file on disk and in library option”. (I have additional copies of the dsf data separately, so nothing is lost). I did have the “update tags when file info changes” option engaged.
The MC library has retained all of the original tags after the conversion (including my custom tags) but these tags did not get written back to the data files on my external drive (which are now flac, and no longer dsf). These data files now haves a more limited range of tags than the original dsf files. When I now try to update the tags from the MC library, the custom tags, which are present in the JRiver Library, are still not written to the data file. I am reading the tags using Mp3tag, with which I created the custom tags. The custom tags are not unusual, in their nature (e.g. tags for the countries of performers and composers to name two examples, but there are quite a number of them)
So my questions now are:
1. Is there any way to update my flac data file with the more comprehensive set of tags that is now in the JRiver library?
2. If option 1 is not possible, is there a way I can rerun the conversion, to ensure all tags get encoded in the converted data file. And the answer to this question would, in any case be useful, as I proceed with my dsf-to-flac conversions.
The only other option is to copy tags from my duplicate set of dsf data files, to the flac files (using, for example, the Mp3tag tag-copy function). This works fine, and the extended tags files are then imported into JRiver with no difficulty. This would take a lot more time to do reliably and, therefore, is not the preferred option.
Thanks again for your help