Change iTunes folder organisation

Currently, my iTunes \ Music folder is organised by Artist then Album then Song.
Can I change this to organise songs by Album then by Song?  Or, in order to use the 'Artists' tab in iTunes, do I need to store it by Artist somewhere along the line?
Duncs

The physical organization on the drive? iTunes has only one way to do this, no options. <Media Folder>\Music\<Artist>\<Album>\## <Name>.<Ext>. (N.b. Album Artist is used in place of Artist if non-blank.)
If you mean within iTunes, explore the options in different views. Songs, for example, will let you sort on the Album column. Other views may have additional sorting options hidden under View > Show View Options (CTRL+J).
tt2

Similar Messages

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  • How To:  Change iTunes media library location/folder

    *PLEASE READ THIS ENTIRE POST BEFORE ATTEMPTING THIS PROCESS. IT’S NOT ROCKET SCIENCE, BUT IT IS FAIRLY INVOLVED AND ENTAILS SOME RISK. THERE ARE SOME WARNINGS AT THE END.*
    ||
    REQUIREMENT
    Move iTunes media (music, videos, podcasts) to another folder and update the iTunes library to reference all the media from that new folder.
    ||
    Example cases: Move iTunes media from C:\ drive to D:\ drive; Change iTunes folder name from Music to Media.
    ||
    Note:
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    ||
    ||
    PROBLEM
    When the location of iTunes media files changes (files are moved, folder name/drive letter changes), iTunes cannot automatically locate these files. iTunes entries can be updated to point to the new location one at a time or by deleting all entries and re-adding all files. Updating one at a time is time consuming, and deleting and re-adding causes a large amount of metadata (play count, date added, rating, etc) to be lost.
    ||
    ||
    SOLUTION
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    ||
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    - *Export the iTunes library:* In iTunes, select File -> Library -> Export Library... and save the file somewhere for editing (Desktop is a good location).
    - *Open Library.xml in a decent text editor:* Notepad is not recommended, since Library.xml can be very large. Some free options include PSPad, Notepad++, Smultron, and Text Wrangler.
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    - - - Note 2: Music, TV Shows, Movies, and Podcasts are stored in this file, so make sure to account for all media types. If the location of all types didn’t change, the find/replace strings will need to take that into account.
    - *Remove all modified media entries from iTunes:* For any of the files that are being moved, the associated metadata must be removed from iTunes to avoid having duplicates in iTunes. This can be done by selecting all entries in iTunes that will be modified, right-clicking the entries, and choosing “Delete”. After confirming that you want to remove the selected item from your iTunes library, make sure to choose to keep the file in the iTunes Media folder if prompted.
    - *Import Library.xml:* Import the modified Library.xml by selecting File -> Library -> Import Playlist... and selecting the modified Library.xml in the file open dialog that appears. Depending on the size of the iTunes Library, this could take a while (10 minutes or more).
    - *Test results:* Locate a file in iTunes that has been moved, right-click on the file, and choose “Get Info”. The “Location:” field should indicate the new location of the file. Close the Info dialog and try to play the file. If the file plays, the process was successful.
    ||
    ||
    _*DISCLAIMERS/ADDITIONAL NOTES*_
    - I tried this out a couple of times, and it worked fine for me. I can’t guarantee it will work for everyone, but I thought I’d share since I couldn’t find instructions for this situation anywhere else.
    - If the process fails, you SHOULD be able move the iTunes media files back to their old location and restore the backed up iTunes library data to the iTunes folder to restore your previous configuration.
    - I wouldn’t recommend attempting this if you don’t feel comfortable with backing up your iTunes library data and editing the XML file.
    - I don’t know if this process will preserve whether videos and podcasts have been played or if it will preserve the play position where items were last paused.
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    - This process duplicates playlists, probably because you are importing your entire library again. I just deleted the duplicates when I was done.

    If all the media is on one drive and you're not letting iTunes manage it then you can achieve the "portable" status simply by moving the library files high enough up the tree, i.e. the root of the drive if necessary, letting iTunes know where the nominal iTunes media folder is and then moving the library to the new drive keeping the relative paths from the library files to each distinct set of media folders unchanged. Personally I don't like iTunes cutting my file & folder names short, but the advantages of a portable library mean that I'm quite happy to organise my media inside the iTunes Media folder, albeit largly on my own terms. Indeed all my non-iTunes multimedia is now also organised in the same folders. The only media files iTunes organises, temporarlily, are rips & downloads apart from active Podcasts whose folder names I leave unchanged. Everything else gets sorted just the way I want it - full length filenames, different character replacements, folder art etc. I used to do it by hand, deleting, tweaking & reimporting, but these days I use a custom script which does it all automatically - renaming files just as I want and reconnecting iTunes to the newly moved file so that no iTunes-only metadata is lost.
    There are similar XML-editing how-tos elsewhere on the web, I just wanted to make the point that there may still sometimes be a way to achieve the desired result which isn't quite as complicated but nevertheless leaves the user fully in control of their file structure.
    Anyway, at least you took the trouble to find a method that works for you first. There are sadly too many tales of woe on these boards from people who've moved all their files around first only to discover that they've broken their libraries and can't work out how to undo the damage.
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    Message was edited by: turingtest2

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    Think I've figured out why, the folder I dropped the files into was within the iTunes managed folder so iTunes emptied it when it was organising the folder................. doh

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