Now to the juicy part! I'm assuming you've already installed the "required" programs above.
![swinsian users group swinsian users group](https://2.bp.blogspot.com/-dYjFAeCAVoo/UWNUFEmnWqI/AAAAAAAAAF8/6vKqH-vKzVo/s1600/Revit+Interface_Full.jpg)
If you disagree with that choice, there's nothing wrong with that. Second, it is nothing more than my opinion when I say that album artist and artist metadata should not include feat. Before I begin I would like to note two more things: first, I am a lowly Windows user, and some of the steps I use are Windows specific. After some searching around last night attempting to resolve this problem I came up with a relatively straightforward workflow.
SWINSIAN USERS GROUP HOW TO
It's a matter of differences in personal preference for how to write tags and how those tags should be interpreted within the chosen music player or library manager.
![swinsian users group swinsian users group](https://i.ytimg.com/vi/gCIpbSnmogQ/hqdefault.jpg)
Note that MusicBee isn't at fault- it's simply reading the tags as they've been written and creating folders according to those tags. Initially, I worked around this by changing metadata manually but this was cumbersome.
![swinsian users group swinsian users group](https://img.medscapestatic.com/slide/migrated/editorial/cmecircle/2007/6875/images/goldstein/18.jpg)
This is really annoying on a filesystem level, but it also creates album fragmentation within my music player if not remedied on an album by album basis. An example can be seen within my 'O' artist folder using Oakenshield: I've had an issue for some time now where my semi-automated file/folder structure software of choice, MusicBee, has created separate artist folders for files containing bad artist or album artist metadata.