Force "Details" folder view to show standard columns in folders with music file in Windows

Edit: may be duplicate of Windows 7 Explorer: How to change the columns displayed for file attributes? Alternative systematic solution presented is not in other thread.

Those columns are because File Explorer sees the audio files in the folder and defaults to using its "music" template to show the folder's contents. There are 2 options depending on how systematic you want the changes you make to be.

You can force change the folder template back to "general items" for this folder so that it won't show those columns by:

  1. Go in to the folder's Properties
  2. Select the "Customize" tab
  3. Under the section "What kind of folder do you want?" change the "Optimize this folder for:" option from "Music" to "General Items".

Once it's applied, the folder's detail view should no longer have the columns specific to music files.

Keep in mind that the changes will only apply to this folder (and any contained subfolders if you selected that option when applying the new properties).

Alternatively, you can change the "music" template itself. So that any folder that windows explorer opens which it automatically applies the "music" template, will display whatever customized view you made.

In the currently open folder that is already in "Music" view mode/template (ie. with columns for artists, genre, etc.), manually change the columns to the desired fields by:

  1. Right-clicking on the title row (row containing Name, #, title, artists, album), and select More... in the pop-up menu.
  2. Change the column selection and order to your desired layout.

Save the changed layout as the default for the "Music" template by:

  1. Open up the File menu (top left)
  2. Select "Change folder and search options"
  3. Select the "View" tab
  4. Under the "Folders views" section, select "Apply to Folders"

Once that is applied, all folders that file explorer will default to "Music" view mode/template will now use this layout.

For more details and illustrations on the alternate method, please consult How-to-Geek's Guide on customizing the windows folder templates