Posts Tagged ‘mp3’
MPD - Music Player Daemon
Written by BinnyVA on April 14, 2008 – 11:48 pm -MPD is not for everyone.
Before continuing into the article, a word of warning. MPD is not for everyone. If you are a casual desktop linux user with zero geek genes, stay away from this player. There are many other simpler players for you.
But then again, ‘casual desktop linux user’ - that sounds like a contradiction in terms. The very fact that you are reading this means that you are a geek.
Getting Started with MPD
Setting up MPD is not as simple as other music players.
Installation
To see MPD in action, first we have to install MPD - and a client. I installed the following…
- MPD server
- MPC - A command line MPD client
- gmpc - A GUI client for Gnome
In a RedHat based system, you can install these using the command…
yum install mpd mpc gmpc
Configuration
Here is where it starts to get a bit confusing. MPD don’t have a pretty GUI to go along with it. It has to be configured using a text file. Create a file ‘.mpdconf’ in your home folder and enter the following in it…
port "6600"
music_directory "~/Songs"
playlist_directory "~/.mpd/playlists"
db_file "~/.mpd/mpd.db"
log_file "~/.mpd/mpd.log"
error_file "~/.mpd/mpd.error"
The ‘music_directory’(”~/Songs” in our example) must point to the folder where you keep your music. If you have your music in multiple folders then I cannot help you. MPD was designed with just one music root directory in mind.
It is a good idea to create the playlist folder now - it will prevent errors later on. To do that run the command…
mkdir -p ~/.mpd/playlists
Next run these commands…
mpd --create-db
mpc update
mpc add /
mpc play
If all went well, you must be hearing sweet music now. Here is an explanation of the commands we used and their purpose…
- mpd –create-db
- This will start the daemon. The ‘–create-db’ argument will read the contents of the root music directory and add the Music files to a text database. You should see the list of files being added into the DB. This may take some time to complete - based on size of your music collection.
- mpc update
- The command used here is ‘mpc’ - not ‘mpd’. We are using a command line client now. This command scans the root music directory for updates.
- mpc add /
- This command will add all the files in the music directory to the current playlist. Please note that the ‘/’ here means root music directory - and not the global linux root.
- mpc play
- This will start playing the files in the current playlist.
GUI Clients
There are many GUI clients for MPD - the ones I would recommend are…
- Gnome Music Player Client(gmpc)
- Sonata
Once the mpd daemon is up and running, just open these clients and click on the connect button to control the daemon using these clients.
Tags: Audio, daemon, mp3, mpd, music, player
Posted in Audio, Configuration | 1 Comment »
Listen - Gtk MP3 Player
Written by BinnyVA on March 22, 2008 – 11:27 pm -
I expected my MP3 player series will end with the last post - but the comments pointed to some other players. Two players stood out - so I decided that I will review them as well. The first one is Listen. Its a Gtk player written in Python.
Features
- Supports Shoutcast Webradio
- Supports Podcast
- Multiple Display modes
- Wikipedia Integration
- Native Lyrics Support

Disadvantages
- No Global Shortcuts
- At least, none that I could find.
- “Interesting” Layout
- The layout is kinda different from the standand layout of amaroK, Exaile, Rythmbox etc. I am still getting used to it. But once you get the hang of it, it could turn out to be a better system than the one that the other players use.
Advantages
- OSD
- Shows up on mouse hover and track change.
- Tray Icon
- Supports play/pause with middle click.
- Music Library
- Listen has a music library - but it supports only a single folder as its library folder.
More Information
Tags: Audio, Gnome, gtk, listen, mp3, music, player, review
Posted in Applications, Audio, Gnome | 4 Comments »
Top 10 Linux MP3 Players
Written by BinnyVA on March 14, 2008 – 11:11 am -
There are no shortage of audio players in Linux. It has everything from command line MP3 players(mpg123) to RAM eating GUI players(like Amarok). With easily available codecs, linux supports almost all available formats.
This is the final post on a series about MP3 Players in linux. This series focuses on dedicated audio players - not video players that can handle audio as well(like mplayer). Without further ado, presenting the top 10 Linux MP3 players…
1. Amarok

amaroK is currently the player of my choice - it rocks. Everything I ever wanted in a MP3 Player and more. It is the clear winner in this field. In my opinion, there is nothing that beats amarok even if you look at Windows and Mac MP3 players as well.
More Information on Amarok MP3 Player
2. XMMS

A Winamp clone. Simple and user friendly, it is very popular on linux. It does not have a large feature set - but I am going to give it second place due to its popularity.

Official Sites for XMMS Player
3. RhythmBox

Rhythmbox Music Player is a music player and library for tagged files, that support various music formats. It was inspired by Apple’s iTunes. Although it is designed to work well under the GNOME Desktop, I had no issues with it in KDE.
RhythmBox - Gnome Music Player
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Official Sites
4. Exaile

Exaile is a music player aiming to be similar to KDE’s Amarok, but for GTK+ and written in Python. It incorporates many of the cool things from Amarok (and other media players)
Exaile - Music Player for Gtk+

Official Sites
5. Audacious

Audacious is not among the ’star media-players’ in Linux - so many people never try it out. But those who have tried it out like it. For the sake of the article, I installed it - and I liked it. I even considered switching from amaroK to Audacious.

Official Sites
6. Banshee

Banshee is an MP3 players for Gnome. You can import, organize, play, and share your music using Banshee’s simple, powerful interface.
Banshee - Music Management and Playback for GNOME
Banshee Official Sites
7. SongBird

SongBird is an MP3 player built on the XUL framework. It’s a desktop media player mashed-up with the Web.
SongBird - The Firefox of MP3 Players
![]()
Official Sites
8. Juk

An audio jukebox that supports collections of MP3, Ogg Vorbis and FLAC files. It is a part of the kdemultimedia package.
9. mpg123/mpg321
mpg123 is a fast, free, minimalist, console MPEG audio player software program for UNIX and Linux operating systems.
mpg123/mpg321 - The Command Line MP3 Players
Official Sites
10. Other MP3 Players and Media Software…
Instead of putting the last MP3 Player here, I am going to list the MP3 software that did not make it to the list…
- Beep Media Player
- X-platform Music Multiplexing System 2 - XMMS2
- SnackAmp
- Decibel Audio Player
- Aqualung
- Cactus Jukebox
So, which is your favorite MP3 Player? Leave a comment…
Update: I reviewed two more players…
Tags: Audio, Gnome, KDE, list, mp3, music, player, review, software, top10
Posted in Applications, Audio, Gnome, KDE | 37 Comments »
mpg123/mpg321 - The Command Line MP3 Players
Written by BinnyVA on February 25, 2008 – 1:25 am -So far we looked at the GUI MP3 Players for linux - like Amarok, Exile, XMMS etc. Most linux users need only that - but there are some people who want a simpler system - command line players. The two top players in this area are mpg123 and mpg321.
mpg123
mpg123 is a fast, free, minimalist, console MPEG audio player software program for UNIX and Linux operating systems. The development on this project ceased for a long time - but now it has a new maintainer.
mpg321
mpg321 is a clone of mpg123.
Installation
Most distros have mpg321 in their repositories(not all have mpg123) - so just log in as root and use these commands to install it…
yum install mpg321 - For RedHat, Fedora, CentOS etc.
OR
apt-get install mpg321 - For Debian, Ubuntu, etc.
Using mpg321
Using mpg321 is straight forward. Since it has no GUI, just go to the folder with the song and just execute the command…
mpg321 MP3_FILE_NAME
If you want to play all the songs in a folder, you have to create a list of files in that folder. Then you have to specify this list as an argument for the mpg321 command. These commands can get the job done…
Create a list of all MP3 Files in the current folder…
find . -name "*.mp3"|sed 's/\.\///;'|sort>List.lst
Use this list as the play list for mpg321
mpg123 --list List.lst
Why Use Command Line Players?
If we have a number of shiny GUI players, why should one use a command line player? Unless you are an anti-GUI command line guru, chances are you don’t need it. But still, it has its uses.
For example, if you have to restart the X Server often for some reason, then mpg321 is the best player for you. All other player will stop playing when X server is down.
This actually happend to me - when I bought my second LCD screen, it took me some time to configure it. And that meant editing the xorg.conf file and restarting the X Server to see if it worked. At that time, I opened a virtual terminal(Ctrl+Alt+F1) and opened mpg321 with a bunch of MP3s in the list. It kept playing even if the X server is down. This is propably the reason that I was still sane after around six hours of XOrg configuration.
Tags: cli, mp3, mpg123, mpg321, player, review
Posted in Audio, Command Line, Tools | 4 Comments »
Exaile - Music Player for Gtk+
Written by BinnyVA on January 7, 2008 – 11:12 pm -
Exaile an amarok clone for Gnome - and I have to admit - I am impressed.
Exaile is a music player aiming to be similar to KDE’s Amarok, but for GTK+ and written in Python. It incorporates many of the cool things from Amarok (and other media players) like automatic fetching of album art, handling of large libraries, lyrics fetching, artist/album information via Wikipedia, Last.fm submission support, and optional iPod support via a plugin.
Features
It has many features that make amarok great…
- Automatic fetching of album art
- Handling large music libraries
- Lyrics fetching
- Fetches Artist/Album information from Wikipedia
And some features that amarok does not have…
- Tabbed playlist interface
- Song Blacklist Manager
Disadvantages
- I could not find the Global Hotkeys feature
Download
If you want to try exaile, you can download exaile and install it yourself.
Related Links
Tags: app, Audio, exaile, gtk, mp3, music, player, review
Posted in Applications, Audio, Gnome | 7 Comments »
Songbird - The Firefox of MP3 Players
Written by BinnyVA on December 11, 2007 – 10:39 pm -I just installed Songbird - an MP3 player built on the XUL framework. It is more integrated with the web than any other player I have seen. This is what Songbird have to say about themselves…
Songbird is a desktop media player mashed-up with the Web. Songbird is committed to playing the music you want, from the sites you want, on the devices you want, challenging the conventions of discovery, purchase, consumption and organization of music on the Internet.
Songbird is a player and a platform. Like Firefox, Songbird is an open source, Open Web project built on the Mozilla platform. Songbird provides a public playground for Web media mash-ups by providing developers with both desktop and Web APIs, developer resources and fostering Open Web media standards, to wit, an Open Media Web.
Advantages
Lots of Plugins
Since Songbird uses the XUL Framework extension development is easy for those who have worked on Mozilla extensions. As a result, there are a lot of extensions available.
Web Integration
This makes support for many features possible - like…
- Podcasts
- MP3 Downloads
- Online Music Stores
- And More…
Cross Platform
Songbird works on Windows, Linux and Mac. Makes no difference to me - but many will find this useful.
Disadvantages
Dark Default Skin
The default skin(or feather, as its know in Songbird) is too ‘flashy’ for my taste. I like simple, easy to use/navigate GUI. The Songbird interface is nothing like that - at least not for me.
Since the default skin is inspired by iTunes, this might be an advantage for iTunes users. For others, this issue is easily solvable - just install another skin.
Bugs
I downloaded the latest ‘Developer Pre-release’ version - so I found some bugs. But I am sure this will be removed in the stable release.
Related Links
Tags: Audio, mp3, review, software, songbird, xul
Posted in Applications, Audio | 6 Comments »
RhythmBox - Gnome Music Player
Written by BinnyVA on December 2, 2007 – 10:52 pm -
Rhythmbox Music Player is a music player and library for tagged files, that support various music formats. It was inspired by Apple’s iTunes. Although it is designed to work well under the GNOME Desktop, I had no issues with it in KDE. RhythmBox uses the GStreamer media framework. It is currently under active development.
Advantages
- Clean Look
- While other players aim to make their software flashy and full of features, RhythmBox went for simplicity. The inferface is very direct and easy to use.
- Browse Mode
- This is an easy way to browse through a large music collection.
- Global Shortcut Available
- I don’t know how - but Global Shortcuts are available. There is no option for it - but one of my global shortcuts - Ctrl+Alt+Home for Play/Pause works.
Disadvantages
- Music Library
- All your music must be within one folder if you want to use RhythmBox’s Music Library. You can set only one folder as the ‘Library Location’. This option is available at ‘Edit > Preferences > ‘Music’ Tab > Library Location
- Font Bug
- When I start RhythmBox, the font of all application becomes one size smaller. I think this is a bug that is limited to KDE - but still very irritating. The only way to fix this is restart the X Server
- Play Queue
- At the top left corner, in the Library column, there is a Option called ‘Play Queue’ - don’t mistake it for Playlist. This is a Queue of all the songs that must be played. If you try to play any song in that list, that song will jump to the top.
- Minimize to System Tray
- To hide the player don’t close it - that will quit the application. If you minimize it, it goes to the taskbar - I want to minimize it to the system tray. To do that, just click on the RhythmBox icon in the system tray. It take a little getting used to - but a workable method.
Tags: Gnome, mp3, music, review, rhythmbox, software
Posted in Applications, Audio | 6 Comments »
5 Improvements for Amarok
Written by BinnyVA on September 30, 2007 – 10:37 pm -
My favorite music player in Linux is amaroK. But, despite all its advantages, there are some areas where amaroK could have done better.
Show Current Song Title on Mouseover
Currently, there is no way I can know what song is playing without opening the application window. In the XMMS Status docklet, the name of the current song will popup if you hover over the system tray icon for some time. Although amaroK shows the song title on song change, it is not shown on mouseover.
Update: amarok has this feature - but some bug in Fedora Core disables it.
Repeat Loop for Artist
amaroK has three different repeat modes…
- Repeat entire playlist
- Repeat current album
- Repeat current track

I would like another repeat loop - ‘Repeat Current Artist’
Repeat loop for all queued tracks
Yet another repeat loop I would like is ‘Repeat all Queued Tracks’.
Less Processor Intensive
One of my main complaints about amaroK is that it is kinda processor intensive. Even when the application is minimized to the system tray, amaroK is at the top in the list of the ‘top’ command. I am not sure that anything can be done about this - decoding MP3 involves a bit of crunching.
Songs must start from the beginning on application launch
Amarok has a feature called ‘Resume playback on start’ - if it is enabled, amaroK will automatically start playing the last played song on startup. The problem is that the song don’t begin at the beginning - it start from the point at which we quit last time. If you quit amaroK at the middle of a song, the next time you start amaroK, it will automatically start playing from the beginning of that song.
This is a very useful feature - I have it enabled. However, I want the song to start from the beginning.
If you want to enable this feature, it can be found here…
Settings > Configure Amarok > Playback > Resume playback on start
That’s my list for now - do you want to add anything to this list? Leave it in the comment section.
Tags: amarok, improvement, mp3, review, software
Posted in Applications, Audio | 4 Comments »
Amarok MP3 Player
Written by BinnyVA on September 23, 2007 – 11:12 pm -amaroK is currently the player of my choice - it rocks. Everything I ever wanted in a MP3 Player and more.
Global Shortcuts
I must be able to control some functions in the player like Play/Pause, Next/Previous song etc. with the keyboard without having to open the software. For example, you are banging away at your keyboard creating the next big thing. Suddenly someone calls you - but you can’t make out what they are trying to say because you are playing music at volumes that makes it audible to a deaf man halfway round the world. Now you have to open up the player, find the pause button(in some winamp skins, they are nearly impossible to find), pause the song and then try to listen to what someone was screaming about.
Wouldn’t it be great if you could just press a keyboard combination from any app and your player pauses? Winamp(version 5 onwards) had this feature if you enabled a plugin called Global Hotkeys. amaroK supports this feature natively - amarok->Settings->Configure Global Shortcuts.
Stays in the System Tray
Another must have feature - when I listen to music I don’t want to see the application that plays it. I don’t want to see some any stupid visualizations. I don’t want to see any dancing pixies. In short, all I want from a player is hear the music - not play some animation that’s eating my CPU cycles.
The best way to make sure of this is if the app stays in the system tray(or status bar). And amaroK does that. Some basic operation(play/pause, stop, etc.) are available from the right click menu of amaroK icon in the system tray.
There is also a hidden feature - just bring you mouse over the amaroK icon in the system tray any scroll the mouse wheel down - this reduces the volume!

But I have one complaint about that - there is no way I can know what song is playing. In the XMMS Status docklet, the name of the currently song will popup if you hover over the icon for some time. That is not possible in AmaroK.

Update: Amarok has this feature - but in Fedora, its disabled. Some bug, I guess
Other Cool Features…
- Media Library
- Fetches Lyrics/Artist Info from the Web
- Supports Podcasts
- Inbuilt Bulk MP3 Tag editor
- Able to access MP3 players(the hardware players - you know - like iPod)
For More Information
Tags: amarok, mp3, review, software
Posted in Applications, Audio, KDE | 7 Comments »



