

I have not tested this myself - but apparently if you use a "ISRC" tag prior to the actual code number in an empty comments field in an id3 tag editor that does not have a specific entry field for it then the ISRC will still be properly embedded.Īs noted before, most tag entry happens via online forms with the digital distributor (such as CD Baby, Tunecore, etc.) so does not usually have to happen at the mastering level - but for occasional client requests for tagged mp3's (or other formats) Jaikoz is inexpensive and works great so is still highly recommended for these occasional id3 tag embedding chores. To me it feels like it's not officially supported in mp3.It IS absolutely supported in the id3 tag standard! So ISRC can be embedded into any file format that supports id3 (i.e.

It can also look up artwork and find duplicates songs' and is a popular app in the audio & music category. Jaikoz performs acoustic fingerprint matching and metadata lookups automatically using the MusicBrainz, Discogs and Acoustid databases. I do get some requests and use jaikoz for that because i think that it's the only program supporting it. Jaikoz is described as 'tagger that specializes in mass tagging of music file tags. Jaikoz is a tag editor not a music player and it has been designed to be fully compatible with popular media players. Allmost 2,5 years later and wondering how people think about ISRC codes in mp3 files. Jaikoz transparently supports tagging of Mp4, M4a, M4p, Flac, Ogg Vorbis files and Mp3 files with ID3v1,ID3v2,ID3v2.2,ID3v2.3 and ID3v2.4 tags, and allows easy conversion between them.
