Media player

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What are the available media players for Emacs ?

EMMS

EMMS, The Emacs Multimedia System.

EMMS is the Emacs Multimedia System. It tries to be a clean and small application to play multimedia files from Emacs using external players. Many of its ideas are derived from MpthreePlayer , but it tries to be more general and cleaner.

The fact that EMMS is based on external players makes it powerful, because it supports all formats that those players support, with no effort from your side.

Features

  • Audio support : MP3, Ogg Vorbis, FLAC
  • Video support : MPEG, WMV, MOV, AVI, OGM, MKV, etc...
  • Tagging capability, possibly batched
  • Playlist management
  • Remotely drivable via emacsclient (playlist creation via rox-filer, for example)
  • covers display
  • Dired integration
  • interactive metadata browser
  • synchronized lyrics display
  • connection to GNU FM radio streams
  • Extensible

the emms multimedia player showing covers

Installation

Install the needed packages with the package manager of your system :

sudo apt-get install emms vorbis-tools

(you may also try with el-get.)

add the following to your ~/.emacs :

(require 'emms-setup)
          (emms-all)
          (emms-default-players)

and, as usual, restart emacs or M-x eval-current-buffer RET.

Usage

You can play a file or a directory with the command M-x emms-play-file or emms-play-directory.

You can add files and directories to the emms playlist (which will be created if it doesn't exist yet) with M-x emms-add-file, play it with emms-start and you can visit the playlist buffer by simply calling M-x emms RET. Hitting '?' in the playlist buffer will show you all the available shortcuts.


Add other file extensions

If you want to, say, be able to read flv videos :

;; add flv and ogv
(define-emms-simple-player mplayer '(file url)
      (regexp-opt '(".ogg" ".mp3" ".wav" ".mpg" ".mpeg" ".wmv" ".wma"
                    ".mov" ".avi" ".divx" ".ogm" ".asf" ".mkv" "http://" "mms://"
                    ".rm" ".rmvb" ".mp4" ".flac" ".vob" ".m4a" ".flv" ".ogv" ".pls"))
      "mplayer" "-slave" "-quiet" "-really-quiet" "-fullscreen")

Extensions

Get lyrics of current song

We have to install emms-get-lyrics.el.

With el-get : el-get-install RET emms-get-lyrics RET.

Or :

(add-to-list 'load-path "~/.emacs.d/my-extensions/")
(require 'emms-get-lyrics)
  • M-x evaluate-current-buffer

Then start playing a song and call M-x emms-get-lyrics-current-song.

Excerpt from its documentation :

The function 'emms-get-lyrics-current-song' tries to get the lyrics of the song that emms is currently playing [from http://www.lyricwiki.org/]. It currently requires w3m to get the lyrics. It copies the lyrics to a file ending in .lyrics; if the variable `emms-get-lyrics-use-files' is nil, it will just display the lyrics in a buffer without saving them to a file. If the variable `emms-get-lyrics-dir' is non-nil, then the lyrics will be put in this directory with the file ARTIST-TITLE.lyrics; otherwise it will be put in the same directory as the song file, in a file with the same name as the song file except the extension will by ".lyrics".

External links

The official documentation: https://www.gnu.org/software/emms/manual/

http://www.emacswiki.org/emacs/EMMS

http://www.gnewsense.org/Documentation/Emacs#Listening_to_Music an easy tutorial to begin with.

Bongo

Bongo is a beautiful, flexible and usable buffer-oriented media player for Emacs, developed in parallel to EMMS 2.0. If you store your music collection locally and use structured file names, then Bongo is a great way for you to play music from within Emacs.

Notable features of Bongo include :

  • separate playlist and library buffers (each of which you may have any number — even zero of both is okay if you don’t need playlist functionality),
  • hierarchical buffers with collapsable sections for each artist and album,
  • familiar Emacs bindings for editing Bongo buffers (edit playlists much like you would regular text),
  • a nice visual seeking interface doubling as a progress meter (hit ‘s’),
  • a visual audio volume control (Volume, which is actually a stand-alone package),
  • built-in support for playing and retreiving information about audio CDs,
  • built-in support for submitting information to Last.fm using ‘lastfmsubmitd’,
  • the ability to perform arbitrary actions (stopping playback is a simple example) once playback reaches certain points in the playlist, using so-called “action tracks”,
  • an XMMS-like keymap for XMMS refugees,
  • zero-configuration, out-of-the-box rock’n’roll action.

Bongo woks with many backend processes : mpg123, mplayer, vlc, ogg123, timidity and others.

An advantage of Bongo over EMMS may be that it can hook into Dired, so one would sort and manage files in Dired and press e to add a track to the playlist.

Installation

There is no el-get recipe for bongo (is there for MELPA in emacs24 ?). You have to install it from git. It is a 3 steps process :

  • go to where you want to put the sources :
cd ~/.emacs.d/your-extensions
  • retrieve the sources :
git clone git://github.com/dbrock/bongo.git
  • Add the Bongo directory to your ‘load-path’, and then run M-x load-library RET bongo RET. Here’s what you’ll want to put in your ~/.emacs:
;; Change this to the correct directory name for you.
(add-to-list 'load-path "~/.emacs/your-extensions/bongo")
(autoload 'bongo "bongo"
  "Start Bongo by switching to a Bongo buffer." t)

Usage

Run Bongo with (have a guess) M-x bongo and you'll be left with a quite explicit buffer. To learn more commands, please notice the menu entry and see the documentation at the project's page.

  [here a nice Bongo logo]

  Welcome to Bongo, the buffer-oriented media player!

  This is a Bongo library buffer.  It's empty now, but in a
  few moments it could hold your entire media collection ---
  or just the parts that you are currently interested in.

  To insert local media files or directories, use `i'.
  To insert the URL of a media file or stream, use `I u RET'.
  To insert other things, use `I TAB' to list possibilities.

  To enqueue tracks in the nearest playlist buffer, use `e'.
  To hop to the nearest playlist buffer, use `h'.

  Enabled backends: mpg123, mplayer, ogg123
  To modify this list, customize `bongo-enabled-backends'.

  Bongo is free software licensed under the GNU GPL.
  Report bugs to <bongo-devel@nongnu.org>.

Basically, you're going to switch between a library buffer and a playlist buffer. You have to add tracks to the library, as indicated. Then you can start playing a track (enter). This adds the track on the playlist buffer. You can switch between buffers with h.

When on the library buffer, to add a track to the end of the playlist, press e. To add it at the beginning, press E.

  • Pause playback : SPC
  • Stop playback : C-c C-s

Getting further

Check the good documentation on the project's page : https://github.com/dbrock/bongo

Play radio

Bongo can read online streams out of the box. As said in the buffer, press i and paste your stream's url.

Remote control

Use bongo-pause/resume, bongo-next and bongo-previous and couple them with EmacsServer.

emacsclient -e '(bongo-pause/resume)'

Issues

Can't play tracks continuously

If Bongo plays a track and stops, try only enabling the mplayer backend only:

   (setq-default bongo-enabled-backends '(mplayer))

External links

Official site : https://github.com/dbrock/bongo Some hacks : http://www.emacswiki.org/emacs/BongoHacks (edit tags, add files from dired,…)

mpdel, a client to MPD

MPDel is an emacs client for the Music Player Daemon. MPDel provides an Emacs user interface to control playback (play, pause, next, volume up…) and to display and control the current playlist as well as your stored playlists (e.g., “my favorites”, “wake me up”, “make me dance”, …).


Dionysos music player

Dionysos (in melpa) is a music player which accepts as backends mpv, mpd and vlc.

Vuiet

Vuiet is a music player and explorer, with recommendations based on Lastfm or Spotify. It can:

  • search songs and artists
  • create playlists, including smart playlists which play songs indefinitely based on criteria
  • explore artists and genres with Lastfm
  • search tracks on youtube and play them with mpv
  • display and save lyrics
  • search inside the saved lyrics