Song Sergeant 1.0 brings order to iTunes

LairWare Software has introduced Song Sergeant 1.0, dedicated to bringing order to your iTunes Library.

According to the makers, Song Sergeant intelligently resolves duplicates, fixes inconsistently named artists and albums, and copes with missing and orphaned song files.


Song Sergeant is capable of merging song files together instead of just deleting extras, letting you keep the best song information and best audio quality even if they're from different song files or downloads.

A detailed "related songs" drawer promises to help you make decisions on what to keep and what to delete.

Song Sergeant costs $20, currently 12.82 at the LairWare store, while a demo version is available for download.

Song Sergeant requires Mac OS X 10.5 or later and works on both Intel and PowerPC based Macs. The application requires an Internet connection.

LairWare, is probably best know for MPFreaker, an application for finding additional song information in your iTunes collection.

MPFreaker searches the Internet to find out which album your song belongs to, the year your song was released, the genre, track numbers, lyrics, and cover artwork.

Song Sergeant 1.0 brings order to iTunes

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