For music libraries

Built for how music actually exists.

FLAC, DSD, classical works, box sets, multi-disc albums, cue sheets. Tag fields that finally fit, not the ones you have to work around.

Built for the formats music actually uses

Beyond the basic tag set.

Lossless across the board

FLAC, ALAC, WAV, DSD64, DSD128, DSF. Reads them all, tags them all, treats them as first-class formats.

Classical works

Composer, conductor, orchestra, soloist, work title, movement number — tag fields built around how classical music is actually catalogued, not bolted on.

Box sets and multi-disc

Disc numbers, disc subtitles, edition variants. A 12-disc symphony cycle stays coherent across every file.

Cue sheets

Reads .cue files alongside whole-disc FLACs. Per-track titles, performers, ISRCs, INDEX timing, all parsed and applied.

How a typical music folder gets processed

From mess to organized.

1

Detect format and structure.

Whole-disc FLAC with a cue? Per-track files in a folder? Multi-disc set across subfolders? ShelfKept figures it out.

2

Read every tag that exists.

ID3, Vorbis comments, MP4 atoms, DSF metadata. Whatever's there, ShelfKept sees it.

3

Propose corrections.

Missing composer field on a classical piece? Track numbers reset on disc two? Missing cue-derived ISRC? Proposed changes shown for review.

Music libraries deserve real tools.

Download ShelfKept and see what your music collection actually looks like.

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