Top 10 iTunes Smart Playlists - lifehacker.com
Top 10 iTunes Smart Playlists

One of iTunes' most powerful and useful features is Smart Playlists
:
dynamic, search-based lists of songs that save you the work of grouping
tunes by hand. But with almost 40 fields to search against—from Album
and Artist to Bit Rate and Category—there are thousands of possible
Smart Playlist combinations. If you listen to music while you work, but
don't want to waste time manually creating playlists in iTunes, today
we've got our top 10 favorite Smart Playlists that will keep your tunes
fresh and focused automatically.
10. Only Music
The base recipe for all your music listening needs in iTunes should
be the "Music Only" Smart Playlist, which excludes podcasts, videos,
PDF's, spoken word, and audio books from the rotation, leaving only
tunes behind. Use this playlist in conjunction with the ones below to
narrow down your music even further. (Hat tip to 43 Folders
for suggesting even more thorough criteria on this playlist.)
9. Holiday/Seasonal Music

Avoid hearing "I'll Be Home for Christmas" in the middle of March with a well-tuned holiday music Smart Playlist that you can exclude from your current playlist during the other 11 months of the year. Just match the word "Holiday" and specific names of holidays (i.e., "Christmas") against the track name, album name, genre, or description. (Make sure you change "Match" rule to "any," not "all.") This same trick works well for Broadway musicals as well: usually the Artist name is "Original Broadway Cast" so "Artist contains Broadway" works in that scenario.
8. Not in the Last Week

Keep your tunes rotation fresh with a simple Smart Playlist that says "don't play anything I've heard already in the last week." I use this one in conjunction with Party Shuffle all the time—just set "Last Played" to "not in the last" then "1 week."
7. PDF's Only

iTunes can store more than just music and video files—it can also handle PDF documents. If you're organizing your PDF library in iTunes, it's easy to create a Smart Playlist to separate your ebooks and scanned receipts from your media files. Just set the Kind to "PDF document."
6. Best of the Year

Automatically create your very own yearly hits playlist with the right Smart Playlist criteria: specify the Date Added range as anywhere from January 1st to December 31st of the year in question, and set the Play Count to be larger than, say, 20. (Tweak that number to your liking to narrow down or expand the length of the list.) And there you have it—and instant list of your personal hits of that year.
5. Neglected Tunes

Funny thing about Party Shuffle—it'll serve up songs you've heard 5 times in the last month and neglect others with a sad Playcount of 0. Dig deep into your iTunes library and make sure you've heard everything with a Smart Playlist that contains only songs with a Playcount of 0. Combine this with the Music only playlist to narrow it down to, well, music only.
4. Not in This Folder

One of the lesser-known playlist features in newer versions of iTunes is the ability to create folders of playlists, and match against the folder name in playlist criteria. For example, all my audio books aren't tagged quite right, so I've got an "Audio Books" folder of playlists. Similarly, you can create folders for "personal genres"—like "College Favorites" or "Summer Camp '99." Then, when you create Smart Playlists, you can grab from or exclude from the folder itself. For example, a playlist called "Adulthood" might exclude tracks in the 80's playlist, as well as the "High School Flashback" and "College Favs" folders.
3. No Skippies

What, you've been too lazy to apply actual ratings to the music in
your iTunes library? Chances are if you started to hear a song you
didn't like, you skipped it. Use the Skip Count criteria to avoid songs
you've avoided in the past. If you do rate your songs, Mac guy Merlin
Mann suggests
using the Skip Count and Ratings criteria to re-rate songs you thought you liked, but skipped anyway.
2. No Shorties

If you've acquired music from less-than-reputable sources over the years, chances are you've got a few cut-off tracks in your library, or maybe you've got a few short intros and outros. To weed out the songs that have been cut off or other short tracks, create a Smart Playlist that contains tracks longer than a certain amount of time (like 1 minute.) Combine this with your Music Only playlist (#10) to make sure you're only hearing full length songs.
1. "Tag" Your Tracks with Keywords in the Comments Field

When the single "Genre" field just doesn't go far enough to describe a track for you, add keywords to a song's Comments field that you can use later to make a Smart Playlist. For example, add the words "gym," "highschoolflashback," "boyrock," "mashup," or "danceparty" or any combination of those to a song's Comments field. Then, create a Smart Playlist that matches those "tags." Voila—instant High School Flashback playlist. (Note: you can also use the "Grouping" field to same effect, but the Comments field is stored within the MP3 and on your iPod. Thanks, Craig!)
What's your favorite iTunes Smart Playlist? Let us know in the comments. In the meantime, also check out our previously posted iTunes power tips feature.
BY
CONSTANTINOS
AT 09:42 AM
I use a couple of smart playlists to help me manage my library.
The first one, is called 'Missing Data', and has these rules:
* Match any:
* Album contains 'Unknown'
* Album contains 'Unidentified'
* Artist contains 'Unknown'
* Artist contains 'Unidentified'
* Artist is 'Various'
* Artist is ''
* Name contains 'Track'
* Name contains 'Track0'
* Name contains 'Track1'
Live updating, no limits.
Optionally, I also created a static playlist called 'Valid Missing Data' where I placed all the tracks that match the above criteria but are not in fact missing any data. Then you can create another smart playlist called simply 'Missing Data' which has the following rules:
* Match ALL
* Playlist is "All Missing Data"
* Playlist is not "Movies" (optional)
* Podcast is false
* Playlist is not "Valid Missing data"
* Match only checked items
* Live updating
That should create a list of tracks you need to look through and fix up!
The next playlist, I use in conjuction with the Party Shuffle feature. I set a few playlists up. The first one is called 'Other Video', that contains all the video tracks in my database that are not music videos:
* Match ANY
* Video Kind is Movie
* Video Kind is TV Show
Then, I have a playlist called 'All Unrated':
* Match ALL
* Rating is 0
* Podcast is false
* Playlist is not 'Other Videos'
* Match only checked items
* Live updating
Finally, in the party shuffle playlist, I set the source: as 'All Unrated', Display: 5 recently played songs, and 15 upcoming songs.
This way, I can play through my party shuffle which will only take unrated tracks. As I rate a track, it's immediately removed from the 'All Unrated' playlist, but it doesn't stop playing because it's in the party shuffle playlist. At some point, all songs will be rated :)
I found this at lifehacker.com

My favorite? "Not Recently Heard Good Music"
• Rating is 4 stars or more
• Last Played is not in the last 3 months
• Last Skipped is not in the last 2 days
(Add any other filtering as necessary. For example, I have one set up for only electronic music.)
The Last Skipped option is what really makes this work for me. If the song came up recently but I just didn't want to hear it, it gets excluded from the list (and leaves the list if I decide to skip it now). This works well because it will get thrown back in the rotation shortly (in this case, 2 days) for another chance.
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