For macOS Catalina and macOS Big Sur, the Retroactive app will let you install and run Aperture, iPhoto and several different versions of iTunes. Apple today released macOS Big Sur 11.2.2, the fourth update to the macOS Big Sur operating system that launched in November. macOS Big Sur 11.2.2 comes two weeks after the release of.
Download iTunes 12.8.2 for Mac This update resolves an issue that may prevent iTunes from playing media to third-party AirPlay speakers. It also includes minor app and performance improvements. Status: Dec 2020 - Confirmed that Big Sur uses the same Media file locations Apple decided to abandon iTunes with its Catalina macOS release. In Catalina the iTunes media swiss army knife has been replaced with three seperate applications and some functions that are now 'hidden' in sharing. MacOS Big Sur; tvOS 14. I miss the good old days of iTunes saving your app files on the Mac automatically during backups. For full coverage of everything Apple announces.
Status: Dec 2020 - Confirmed that Big Sur uses the same Media file locations
Apple decided to abandon iTunes with its Catalina macOS release. In Catalina the iTunes media swiss army knife has been replaced with three seperate applications and some functions that are now 'hidden' in sharing.
The impact is that upgrading to Catalina changes quite a lot of macOS media handling. This is likely to be problematic, for many Mac users, as media content is one of the most valuable things on a well used Mac.
This note provides guideance as to where the various media files are stored and what you can do to make things managable.
With iTunes all your media was contained within:
Sitting under this you had:
If you have set iTunes to manage your library then all your media files will be sitting under this directory structure, including: Music, Movies, TV & Podcasts
This was nice as you could move the library by just copying/moving the entire directory structure and all was well.
This is no longer the case with Catalina.
With macOS Catalina what was once handled by one big iTunes application is now handled by three big applications and Books ;-) .
Each of these has its own media storage location, but depending on how you started, the actual media content could still be held within your prior iTunes Library (above).
The default locations for media in this new world are:
The details for the various apps and storage locations are described in turn.
NOTE: These media file locations are also valid with 'Big Sur'
Sitting within this you will have:
NOTE: the plist file is a binary files, but you can see contents using the plutil command.
If you had an existing iTunes library then on starting the new Music app, you will be prompted to migrate your library Music. This will load the catalog and set the media location to the existing iTunes media location.
If you want re-consolidate your music and music videos under the new Music library then:
NOTE: There is a signficant bug in new Music App when it comes to keeping your iTunes cover art. There are many reports of intital migration resulting in lost cover art, and if you have very large iTunes libray then the cover art migration process can take more than a day to complete. I have found that even it you do manage to get the inital migration to Music to process the cover art successfully, if you move your library to different a machine then the cover art will get lost again and fixing is either a programming exercise or a laborious manual process.
See 'Music Cover Art' below for more information.
Music cover art is one of the problem areas in moving from iTuness to Music. In iTunes cover art is managed via a special catalog within the iTunes media library. There are a number of different levels of cover art that iTunes and Music manage:
In Music the cover art directory appears to be maintained seperately in:
This container based catalog is obviously not in the same directory tree as ~/Music/Music .
The consequence of this is that if you move your Music directory to another machine, then you will be leaving behind the cover art catalog.
Apple answer to this problem is that any moving of media data from one Mac to another should be done via the Migration Assistant, which is aware of all the various files and locations.
NOTE: Big Sur appears to have address some of the cover art bugs. See my Big Sur update.
Sitting within this you will have:
The migration from iTunes to Catalina TV is equivalent to that for Music. The migration to TV library occurs when you first run TV app. This generates a new catalog and media files will be left in iTunes folder.
If you want to consolidate into new ~/Movies/TV directory then you will need to follow simillar step to Music above:
NOTE: The Movie / TV content migration seems to work and be less problematic than music one. One reason is that there is no Cover Art. A problem I have seen is that if you have downloaded movies from the iTunes Store, then these now appear twice in your Movie library, one for the downloaded copy and a second one for the iTunes store cloud version. If you delete the downloaded version from your library and then re-download the file, this fixes the problem. If you have a large number of Movies then this will result in a lot of very large downloads.
Be aware that the Podcasts app, will want to automatically delete played podcasts and if you have old podcast that are no longer available then this will result in lost podcasts. So ensure you change your Preferences to stop auto deletion of played podcasts.
I have sucessfully moved Podcasts from one machine to another by copying the entire directory tree and contents:
All this moving media content around is a nuisance, so why bother. The reason is that media files take up lot of storage space and many people move them to external storage for both more storage, but also to provide greater data security. Having a large media store on a single disk has high risk of failure, in fact it is guaranteed to fail eventually.
With iTunes this was pretty easy to do as you could simply move/copy the entire iTunes directory to an alternate location and then restart iTunes holding the 'Option' key and select the new location.
When you have the catalog and media content in different directories and music and music and movies managed seperately this is not possible. So the easiest way is to accept the Catalina change and move to two seperate consolidated directories.
Having seperate library for Music and Movies means you have some additional flexibility in the files location.
I have also found that when consolidating under the new directories that the new APFS file system must be using some type of hard linking as my 700GB existing media library, did not grow to double the size on consolidation.
Once I had consolidated my content into each of the seperate directories, Movie and Podcasts appear to be readily movable, but music is problematic due Cover art bugs. On consolidating to new location I was able to remove the old iTunes directory, to help recover disk space.
This blog posting was driven by desperation, as recently our family media Mac mini running Catalina crashed and I had to go to some substantial lengths to get back all the media content on it.
The recovery process meant peeling off the details of changes that have occured to iTunes and its storage solution. The documentation for Catalina was very limited and less detailed than what was previously available on iTunes.
To validate and test this I have used a combination of repaired Mac, a KVM virtual machine based on Time Machine backup of dead Mac and a MacBook Pro laptop, so process of recovery of Catalina based media required quite a lot time, 3 Macs and lots of storage to test various alternate recovery techniques.
References & Links:
Reading and Modifying OS X plists - very old blog on plists tools
Move or Manage the Music, Apple TV and Podcasts Libraries - Rocket Yard (MacSales) partial information on how to manage Catalina media libraries
What happened to iTunes ? - Apple's answers to the surprise they gave us ...
Big Sur - does this change things, fix things or it is the same. I have done some initial testing and documented finding in my 'Big Sur' update
Low Res Image (based on Arcade Fire - Funeral) - via SoundCloud - Out of Tune