So I'm in the middle of adding a few CDs, but as of right now the numbers are as follows:
As suspected, my classical tracks are shorter than average (I listen to more Baroque suites than symphonies) and jazz tracks are longer. The top nine albums by # of tracks are classical (this includes two double albums condensed into one; something not done in other genres). Most albums by artist is 6 (Old 97's & Eddie from Ohio - both have a double live and an EP included in this count). Of the ten longest tracks, four are jazz, six are classical. The fifteenth longest track is the first non-classical or jazz track of the bunch.
I have a very preliminary count for train and transportation songs, but I'm going to go over the list at least one more time, to be sure I haven't missed anything.
#Tracks D H M S %Tr %Ti AvgLen Mins Sec All 2544 7 2 15 19 241 4 1 Classical 409 22 33 44 16.08% 13.25% 199 3 19 Jazz 436 1 13 48 17 17.14% 22.20% 312 5 12 Rock 570 1 13 51 56 22.41% 22.24% 239 3 59 Folk 511 1 9 44 16 20.09% 19.82% 238 3 58 Bluegrass 168 9 59 38 6.60% 5.87% 214 3 34 Country 324 20 29 17 12.74% 12.03% 228 3 48 Soundtrack 73 4 19 27 2.87% 2.54% 213 3 33 World 53 3 28 44 2.08% 2.04% 236 3 56
As suspected, my classical tracks are shorter than average (I listen to more Baroque suites than symphonies) and jazz tracks are longer. The top nine albums by # of tracks are classical (this includes two double albums condensed into one; something not done in other genres). Most albums by artist is 6 (Old 97's & Eddie from Ohio - both have a double live and an EP included in this count). Of the ten longest tracks, four are jazz, six are classical. The fifteenth longest track is the first non-classical or jazz track of the bunch.
I have a very preliminary count for train and transportation songs, but I'm going to go over the list at least one more time, to be sure I haven't missed anything.