WAIT!
before you start commenting that TUI musicplayer xy is the best, my priorities:
must have:
- support for m3u playlists (synced to Android with Syncthingy) should autodetect them in a single folder I use also for the music files, and read/write them
- support for viewing all files
- support for custom music directories
- support for deleting music files
- Flatpak OR clutterfree on KDE
would like:
- Pipewire output
- nice simple GUI
- modern, clutterfree design OR customizability
- subtitles, cover images, etc.
I used G4Music which looks awesome and has minimal playlist support. It works really well but it cant write to the playlist. It is blazingly fast, and I made an issue, offering a bounty for write-to-playlist support.
I found Lollypop, the old GTK UI is way better than the Qt alternatives, while still kinda ugly. But it seems to tick all boxes, apart from Pipewire support.
What I tried:
G4Music
- UI perfect
- no file deletion
- no playlist addition
- no playlist creation
Lollypop
- UI is bareable
- pulseaudio, no setting at all
- playlist support including writing to! You need to enable it
- lots of internet stuff for artwork and subtitles
- sane defaults
GNOME music
- does not detect my .m3u playlists
- slow
- needs pulseaudio
- settings are a joke
- no folder view
Strawberry
- UI is horrible and not customizable enough
- no Pipewire support
- no .m3u detection
- cluttered, no UI zoom possible
- system icon theme is not applied
Clementine
- like strawberry but different?
- more online stuff
- interface less customizable
- cursor broken on the Flatpak
Amarok
- Strawberry in even older?
- bloat?
- retro-development status
MusicPod
- UI hides too much stuff
- no playlist support
- no filesystem hierarchy support
- strange Ubuntu look, but good UI, fancy background
- no podcast backup file support (so Kasts is better for that)
- but pipewire support!
Plattenalbum
- no playlist support
- otherwise looks great
Resonance
- modern, GTK4 Libadwaita, UI is damn lit
- freezes, fills up the entire RAM (scans every title at once!) -> not optimized at all, made system freeze and needed to hard shutdown.
- no playlist support?
- no pipewire support?
Melody
- uses soon EOL GNOME 42 runtime
Amberol
- beautiful but too minimalist
- why are there soo many GNOME music players??
moosync
- very nice UI
- electron: tiny cursor on Wayland, no Pipewire support
- plugin support for Youtube, Spotify (using librespot) and LastFM
- local playlists seem broken
Maybe JuK: https://juk.kde.org/
It is for the most part as minimal as it looks, except that it’s actually quite good for playlists and managing one’s music collection.
It doesn’t have a ton of devs behind it, so I would be surprised, if they had native Pipewire support already. Otherwise, I think, it covers what you’ve listed.
Juk was the main music player in LXQt and I cant find it anywhere.
It will likely be on Qt5 or even older, and not get updates any time soon.
Dunno what you mean. JuK was ported to Qt6 last February alongside the rest of KDE. It’s on Flathub and most distro repositories.
Interesting? I didnt know that. Will have another look at it
Interesting maybe that was a bit later, when I looked I could not find it.
Thanks for pointing that out!