![]() Note: as one commenter pointed out, deleting this folder resolved an issue where iTunes was slow to launch. Mine is more than 4.5 GB, for a library of some 70,000 items. It will contain cache files for items you’ve deleted, and, as you can see above, it can take up a lot of space. If you often add music or other content to your iTunes library and remove it, I’d recommend deleting this folder from time to time, if only to save space. But over time, the cache will be rebuilt, and this can fix some issues with album artwork displaying incorrectly.ĭon’t delete the other folders they contain artwork for purchased tracks, where the artwork isn’t embedded in the files, or other items in the cloud. You’ll notice that iTunes lags a bit when displaying a lot of content as I said above, it has to extract the artwork from the files, and this takes a bit of time. ![]() The folder is in ~/Music/iTunes/Album Artwork that’s the iTunes folder in the Music folder in your home folder (the one with your user name and the house icon):ĭelete the Cache folder, empty the Trash, quit iTunes and relaunch it. I’ve found that, when I have issues with album art not displaying correctly, or not displaying at all, deleting this folder – stored in your iTunes folder – resolves them. ![]() If so, it creates a cache file of the artwork, so it doesn’t have to read the music files every time it displays them. When you view files in iTunes, the app checks to see if there is album artwork embedded in the files, or downloaded separately (for purchased files). There’s a simply trick that can resolve these issues: it involves deleting a cache folder that iTunes stores on your computer to speed up the display of album art. I’ve recently gotten a number of emails from people with iTunes issues where album artwork doesn’t display correctly. ![]()
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