Skip to content

snejus/beetcamp

Repository files navigation

Stand With Ukraine


image Quality Gate Status Coverage Status Hits

Bandcamp autotagger plugin for beets. It mostly focuses on

  • Staying up-to-date with information Bandcamp provide in the JSON metadata
  • Parsing all possible (if relevant) metadata from various places
    • For example, a catalog number given in the release or media description
  • Correctness of the data
    • For example, determining artist names from various artists releases
  • Compliance with MusicBrainz fields format, to remove the need for pre-processing if, for example, one wishes to upload the metadata to MB.

Thanks to unrblt for beets-bandcamp providing the idea and initial implementation.

Installation

Recommended method

  1. Install beets with pipx so that it's isolated from your system and other projects
pipx install beets
  1. Inject beetcamp and other dependencies that you need. The --include-apps flag is required to make sure that beetcamp is made available in your command line.
pipx inject --include-apps beets beetcamp [python-mpd2 ...]
  1. Add bandcamp to the plugins list to your beets configuration file.

Otherwise

Navigate to your beets virtual environment and install the plug-in with

pip install beetcamp

CLI

The plugin exposes some of its functionality through a command-line application beetcamp:

usage: beetcamp [-h] [-a] [-l] [-t] [-o INDEX] [-p PAGE] (release_url | query)

Get bandcamp release metadata from the given <release-url> or perform
bandcamp search with <query>. Anything that does not start with https://
will be assumed to be a query. Search type flags: -a for albums, -l for
labels and artists, -t for tracks. By default, all types are searched.

positional arguments:
  release_url  Release URL, starting with https:// OR
  query        Search query

optional arguments:
  -h, --help   show this help message and exit
  -a, --album  Search albums
  -l, --label  Search labels and artists
  -t, --track  Search tracks
  -o INDEX, --open INDEX
                        Open search result indexed by INDEX in the browser
  -p PAGE, --page PAGE  The results page to show, 1 by default
  • Use beetcamp <bandcamp-release-url> to return release metadata in JSON format.
  • Use beetcamp [-alt] <query> to search albums, labels and tracks on Bandcamp and return results in JSON.
  • Search results are indexed - add -o <index> in order to open the chosen URL in the browser.

You can see how the data looks below (the output is prettified with rich-tables).

image

Configuration

Default

bandcamp:
  include_digital_only_tracks: true
  search_max: 2
  art: yes
  comments_separator: "\n---\n"
  truncate_comments: no
  exclude_extra_fields: []
  genre:
    capitalize: no
    maximum: 0
    always_include: []
    mode: progressive # classical, progressive or psychedelic

include_digital_only_tracks

  • Type: bool
  • Default: true

For media that isn't Digital Media, include all tracks, even if their titles contain digital only (or alike).

If you have False here, then, for example, a Vinyl media of an album will only include the tracks that are supposed to be found in that media.


search_max

  • Type: int
  • Default: 2.

Number of items to fetch through search, maximum is 18. Usually, a matching release should be found among the first two items.


art

  • Type: bool
  • Default: false.

Add a source to the FetchArt plug-in to download album art for Bandcamp albums (requires FetchArt plug-in enabled).


comments_separator

  • Type: string
  • Default: "\n---\n".

The separator that divides release, media descriptions and credits within the comments field. By default you would get

Description
---
Media description
---
Credits

truncate_comments

  • Type: bool
  • Default: false.

MPD users may have experienced issues with songs that have very long comments: if there is a track in the queue with a comments field longer than 4047 characters, MPD fails to return any metadata.

This configuration option truncates the comments field to the maximum length that MPD can handle, and saves the full comment as a flexible attribute on the album.


exclude_extra_fields

  • Type: list
  • Default: empty

List of fields that you do not want to see in the metadata. For example, if you find the inclusion of comments irrelevant and are not interested in lyrics, you could specify

bandcamp:
  search_max: 5
  exclude_extra_fields:
    - lyrics
    - comments

and the plugin will skip them.

You cannot exclude album, album_id, artist_id, media and data_url album fields.


genre

  • Type: object
  • Default:
    genre:
      capitalize: no
      maximum: 0 # no maximum
      mode: progressive
      always_include: []

genre.capitalize: Classical, Techno instead of default classical, techno. For consistency, this option also applies to the style field.

genre.maximum caps the maximum number of included genres. This may be of value in those cases where artists/labels begin the list with the most relevant keywords, however be aware it is rarely the case.

genre.mode accepts one of the following options: classical (less genres) or progressive or psychedelic (more genres). Each later one is more flexible regarding what is a valid genre and what is not. See below (we use the list of musicbrainz genres for reference).

genre.always_include: genre patterns that override the mode and always match successfully. For example, if you want to bypass checks for every keyword that ends with core, you could specify

genre:
  always_include:
    - "core$"
genre modes

We can place all keywords into the following buckets:

type
1 genre a valid single-word musicbrainz genre
1 more specific genre a valid musicbrainz genre made of multiple words
2 somegenre someothergenre each of the words is a valid musicbrainz genre, but the combo is not
3 very specific genre not all words are valid genres, but the very last one is
4 maybe genre but but it is followed by noise at the end
4 some sort of location irrelevant
  • classical mode strictly follows the musicbrainz list of genres, therefore it covers type 1 only
  • progressive mode, in addition to the above, takes into account each of the words that make up the keyword and will be fine as long as each of those words maps to some sort of genre from the musicbrainz list. It covers types 1 and 2.
  • psychedelic (or noise) mode, in addition to the above, treats the keyword as a valid genre as long as the last word in it maps to some genre - covering types 1 to 3. This one should include the hottest genre naming trends but is also liable to covering the latest <some-label>-<genre> or <some-city>-<some-very-generic-genre> trends which may not be ideal. It should though be the best option for those who enjoy detailed, fine-grained stats.
  • type 4 is ignored in each case (can be overridden and included through the genre.include option).

See below for some examples and a comparison between the modes.

type keyword classical progressive psychedelic
1 techno
1 funk
1 ambient
1 noise
1 ambient techno
2 techno funk
4 funky
4 bleep
3 funky techno
4 bleepy beep
3 bleepy beep noise
4 bleepy noise beep

Usage

This plug-in uses Bandcamp release URL as album_id (.../album/... for albums and .../track/... for singletons). If no matching release is found during the import you can select enter Id and paste the URL that you have.

Supported metadata

field singleton album track album note
album
album_id release Bandcamp URL
albumartist
albumstatus
albumtype *✔
albumtypes *✔ *✔
artist
artist_id label / publisher Bandcamp URL
catalognum *✔
comments *✔ *✔ release and media descriptions, and credits
country *✔
day *✔
disctitle *✔
genre *✔ *✔ comma-delimited list of release keywords which match musicbrainz genres
index
label *✔
length
lyrics *✔ *✔
media *✔
medium likely to be inaccurate, since it depends on information in the release description
mediums
medium_index for now, same as index
medium_total total number of tracks in the release
month *✔
style *✔ *✔ Bandcamp genre tag
title
track_alt
track_id track URL
va
year *✔

* Available with beets versions 1.5 or higher.