Filter out unwanted music in iTunes

By Donald Bell on 04 November 2008

Back in the CD era, it was easy to keep my wife's music collection separated from my own. We kept my CDs on one side of the shelf and her CDs on the other side, and the few CDs we both enjoyed would sit somewhere in the middle. The territorial lines were easy to maintain, and for the most part, music was never an issue in our house.

In the MP3 era, however, everything's become more complicated. We have a central home computer that hosts our collective iTunes music library. Unfortunately, the CD shelf system we've relied on for years doesn't translate on the computer. Her Tori Amos and Fiona Apple are right up next to my Squarepusher and Black Keys, and our iPods don't include a "his and her" music feature.

Granted, we could have made separate user profiles on our PC with individual iTunes music libraries, but that would make it hard to share the music we have in common. We also considered setting up our iPods to manually sync music instead of syncing automatically, but neither of us have the time to carefully groom our iPod's music collection and the extra step of manually ejecting our iPods each day can be a pain. We just want our shelf back.

Fortunately, I found a solution that worked for us. By setting up a couple of Smart playlists, we made iTunes intelligent enough to reliably keep the worst parts of her music collection off my iPod, and vice-versa. Unlike typical playlist techniques, which create lists of music you enjoy, the beauty of this system is that it works off the music you hate — which is much more fun. If you're interested, I've put together a step-by-step slideshow on how it's all done.

If you've got your own method of maintaining peace with multiple iPods and a communal iTunes music library, help us all out by sharing it in the comments section.

When you connect your iPod or iPhone to your computer, click on your device from the left pane and you'll see that iTunes offers some basic controls over personalisation. You can choose exactly what photo libraries, music playlists, podcasts, videos, and contact data you want to automatically sync to your particular iPod, as well as what content you want to ignore.

Topics: itunes, ipod, music, playlist, itune

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Comments (3)

  • some duuuude commented on 04/11/2008 21:47 Report abuse

    The best way to seperate two users within iTunes without setting up another account is to actually create a seperate library - which is very very easy.. When opening iTunes on a mac option click the icon on your dock (not sure if this works in windoze) click "create library" when the dialogue box appears, and then name the libray such as "Example Name's Library". Now you have a library that is like new, and totally seperate to the existing library. Both can appear on networks, the iPhone/iPod touch "remote" can control both libraries and you can have two seperate iTunes store accounts. File > add to library and you can import all of your music/videos etc. Then carry on, not having to worry about the other users crap you dont want. Note: When starting iTunes you must option click the icon, so that when the dialogue box next appears you can choose which library you would like to open.

  • the_maso commented on 04/11/2008 14:55 Report abuse

    Joey Jojo, so, in short you missed the day at school where they taught you how to use an apostrophe properly.

  • Joey Jojo commented on 04/11/2008 13:59 Report abuse

    So in short, you worked out how to create a playlist and sync it to your iPod? ...any job's going at CNET? :)

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