Yamaha MCX-2000 User Manual

Page of 132
MCX-2000 Owner’s Manual
49
Alphabetical index search Buttons
Unlike the PAGE scroll buttons, the Alphabetical index search 
buttons only work with lists that sort items in alphabetical order. 
If you select All Songs for the search category, you will always 
have an alphabetical list of all archived songs, and this list may 
be long enough—spanning across multiple screens, depending 
on how many songs you have.
n The alphabetical order of the MCX-2000 list view sorts items 
according to the following order: ASCII-based English first, 
followed by other Latin languages and Japanese Kana-Kanji 
characters.
In the above screen, you know there are a total of196 songs and 
you must scroll down the list no fewer than 19 times to see all 
song titles, even if you use the PAGE scroll buttons. If you know 
a target song’s title, however, you can conveniently use two 
Alphabetical index search buttons to quickly find the song. Use 
the down arrow button to jump in an A-to-Z direction, or use the 
up arrow button to jump in a Z-to-A direction, to the first song in 
each alphabetical index.
Identifying an List Item
If there are two or more songs (or albums) that have a duplicate 
name in your music archive, they might be confusing in a list 
view of All Songs (or Albums). You must play them just for 
identification? No. Simply use the Information command from the 
Submenu in each list view screen.
Move the selection (highlight) to your target item, and then select 
Information from the Submenu. A dialog box appears, showing 
detailed information of the current item. If it is an album, you can 
see information including how many song the album contains, who 
performed the album songs, which genre the album has been 
categorized into, and when the album has been archived. If the 
current item is a song, in addition to the album information, you will 
see the audio format (data format for archiving the song) and how 
many times it was played.
By confirming such detailed information, you can identify each 
list item even though it has a duplicate name with others. You 
don’t always need to play it just for identification.
You may also encounter a duplicate name if the MCX-2000 
couldn’t get song data while importing a music CD into the music 
archive. In this case, the MCX-2000 has given a generic name 
“Unknown” to the album title, as well as “Track” to each song in the 
album. As a result, you may have a number of “Unknown” albums 
and “Track” songs in your music archive. To solve this problem, 
move the selection (highlight) to a list item with a generic name, 
and then select CDDB Info from the Submenu. If the CDDB 
database has been updated since you archived the album, the 
MCX-2000 will be able to retrieve appropriate song data and 
update titles of the relevant album and songs.
n For quicker access of CDDB data, the MCX-2000 is designed 
to keep song data for last 100 music CDs (maximum) retrieved 
from the online CDDB database. However, you can ignore 
existing data by retrieving the latest data using the CDDB Info 
command available from the Submenu in several Music Archive 
screens.
n Don’t worry if you still see generic names after executing the 
CDDB Info command. The rest of the Submenu commands let 
you manually edit the title or name of a list item currently 
selected. But, be careful when using these commands. They 
can break links in the song data—relationship among song title, 
album title, artist name and categorized genre—or even delete 
song audio data itself. See “Editing the Library” (page 75) on 
how to use these Submenu commands.