A Music Player with CD ripping and CDDB lookup
I'm currently looking for a native Music Player and Library Organizer, which supports Audio CD ripping with CDDB lookup.
I know there's Banshee, but it's a Mono-executed .NET program, which doesn't work well on my computer. So this is why I'm looking for a native program.
I know that there are standalone rippers like RipperX, but I'd prefer a solution which has the ripper included in the music player.
My currently preferred music player is Clementine, which can play Audio CD's, but fails at ripping them. It'd be nice if there was a ripping plugin for Clementine, since I would rather keep my current player.
software-recommendation cd-ripping cddb
add a comment |
I'm currently looking for a native Music Player and Library Organizer, which supports Audio CD ripping with CDDB lookup.
I know there's Banshee, but it's a Mono-executed .NET program, which doesn't work well on my computer. So this is why I'm looking for a native program.
I know that there are standalone rippers like RipperX, but I'd prefer a solution which has the ripper included in the music player.
My currently preferred music player is Clementine, which can play Audio CD's, but fails at ripping them. It'd be nice if there was a ripping plugin for Clementine, since I would rather keep my current player.
software-recommendation cd-ripping cddb
Although the below answer is very helpful, it may be worth noting that Clementine now supports CD ripping.
– Kyle Barbour
Mar 19 '17 at 1:13
add a comment |
I'm currently looking for a native Music Player and Library Organizer, which supports Audio CD ripping with CDDB lookup.
I know there's Banshee, but it's a Mono-executed .NET program, which doesn't work well on my computer. So this is why I'm looking for a native program.
I know that there are standalone rippers like RipperX, but I'd prefer a solution which has the ripper included in the music player.
My currently preferred music player is Clementine, which can play Audio CD's, but fails at ripping them. It'd be nice if there was a ripping plugin for Clementine, since I would rather keep my current player.
software-recommendation cd-ripping cddb
I'm currently looking for a native Music Player and Library Organizer, which supports Audio CD ripping with CDDB lookup.
I know there's Banshee, but it's a Mono-executed .NET program, which doesn't work well on my computer. So this is why I'm looking for a native program.
I know that there are standalone rippers like RipperX, but I'd prefer a solution which has the ripper included in the music player.
My currently preferred music player is Clementine, which can play Audio CD's, but fails at ripping them. It'd be nice if there was a ripping plugin for Clementine, since I would rather keep my current player.
software-recommendation cd-ripping cddb
software-recommendation cd-ripping cddb
edited Feb 7 '15 at 13:59
landroni
4,24462249
4,24462249
asked Oct 26 '14 at 18:28
s3lphs3lph
10.4k94572
10.4k94572
Although the below answer is very helpful, it may be worth noting that Clementine now supports CD ripping.
– Kyle Barbour
Mar 19 '17 at 1:13
add a comment |
Although the below answer is very helpful, it may be worth noting that Clementine now supports CD ripping.
– Kyle Barbour
Mar 19 '17 at 1:13
Although the below answer is very helpful, it may be worth noting that Clementine now supports CD ripping.
– Kyle Barbour
Mar 19 '17 at 1:13
Although the below answer is very helpful, it may be worth noting that Clementine now supports CD ripping.
– Kyle Barbour
Mar 19 '17 at 1:13
add a comment |
3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
There are players that can rip audio CDs, but one should consider the fact that this procedure may be tricky, not all are equally good, and specialized tools would fit the purpose better: Sound Juicer and Asunder in Gnome and related desktops, Audex, SoundKonverter and Asunder in KDE.
One of the most striking difference between all these (whether players or separate ripping tools) comes with CDs for which the metadata is not easy to find. You may need to try different tools to get the proper track names, so it's better to have 2 or 3 different such tools installed. (From my experience, Deadbeef, Qmmp, Amarok and Asunder rarely miss.)
That said, the already mentioned Rhythmbox is fine, except in KDE. For KDE, see below. It can even read the CD-Text data (track info present on the CD itself that can be accessed offline but not all players can read)
Deadbeef can work very well on all desktops and it is very light.
To get the CDDB info, version 6.2 needs you to un-check the option "Prefer CD-Text over CDDB" (under Preferences-Plugins-Audio CD player-Configure) - because of a bug.
Deadbeef can also read CD-Text.
In the past some codecs needed to be installed - like so - possibly this is not needed, but you can test
sudo apt-get install faac flac lame musepack-tools vorbis-tools wavpack
To start an Audio CD directly in Deadbeef the command to use is deadbeef all.cda
. (That can be used in a launcher/icon etc.)
Wait for the CDDB metadata or CD-Text to be read. Before converting, you may select files and reload CDDB
To adjust converting settings, one cannot edit or remove the default configurations, but new ones can be created based on the default ones. Just select one of those as if to edit,
then select copy:
that will open the 'add new encoder' window. Make changes there (for example, for FLAC, level 8 is maximum compression), press ok and a new configuration is added.
More details in a special answer on this topic,here.
Banshee is still a good solution (but avoid it in KDE).
Once inserted, the Audio CD is displayed in the left pane. Select it, it will fetch the online track info. Press Import CD in the top right corner to rip. To set the ripping options right click Audio CD in the left pane, Audio CD Preferences (OR - Edit - Preferences in main menus), then: Source specific - Source - Audio CDs
You can chose between Wav, mp3, flac and ogg with various settings. It has a somewhat limited capacity of finding cd info online. Tracks go to ~./Music
folder.
Qmmp - present in repos, but it's better to install the latest version
sudo add-apt-repository ppa:forkotov02/ppa
sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get install qmmp qmmp-plugin-pack
It seems to lack an internal menu option to open audio CDs, but that can be easily fixed following this answer.
Enable converter and decoders plugins.
(At the plugins settings you can change also the interface: replacing the "skinned" Winamp-like user interface with the "simpler" one, which in fact is more fully-featured to easily access tabs, files and folders, etc. But the following does not depend on that.)
After opening the audio CD, Qmmp looks for proper names etc. Select them all, and go to 'Actions' -'Convert'.
Exaile version 3.4 and above can see the cd easily
The 14.04 version is 3.3 and lacks that. To install latest in 14.04:
sudo add-apt-repository -y ppa:nilarimogard/webupd8
sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get install exaile exaile-plugin-contextinfo exaile-plugin-ipod exaile-plugin-moodbar
Click Import CD button above the list and it will convert the cd to flac in ~./
It works fine in both KDE and Gnome&co.
In KDE.
Amarok.
Just inserting a cd and starting the player you get the Audio CD entry inside Media sources - Local Music pane.
Right-click cd title: 'Copy to collection' > 'Local collection'
There you can select formats and advanced options
Then you can set tags, location (default ./Music
), etc
Proceed, and you'll see the progress in the lower part of the player window.
Amarok can also read CD-Text. Ripping seems to take longer with this tool than with others.
Deadbeef is my favourite.
add a comment |
Rhythmbox may be ideal - I think it is/was the default music player for Gnome. It sorts the library of music, so you can browse it easily:
Can search it:
As well as organise playlists, show visualizations, track change notifications, crossfade tracks, and use various plugins:
It can also rip Music from CDs - CDs should show under 'Devices', and can be ripped by pressing 'Extract' - it will also notify if you have previously ripped the CD and will overwrite any changes:
The CD will be saved under the Music directory, under the appropriate Artist/Album values:
N.B. done with a bad exemplar CD (no track info at all), and Rhythmbox 2.99.1
Yeah, Rhythmbox is the Ubuntu/Unity default. But does it implement CDDB lookup? Tell me if I'm wrong, but I don't think so.
– s3lph
Oct 27 '14 at 19:40
Depends on what you want to look up - it looks up cover art, and can find it most of the time - other info can be found via the context pane plugin, which seems to require last.fm sync, otherwise just shows links to Allmusic, Wikipedia, etc.
– Wilf
Oct 27 '14 at 21:48
Yes, actually I want to fetch the song information: Artist, Album, Name, etc. and embed it as ID3 tags. Can Rhythmbox do this without last.fm?
– s3lph
Oct 28 '14 at 20:05
is it limited to ogg?
– cipricus
Jan 12 '16 at 17:04
Rhythmbox can fetch online media tags
– cipricus
Jan 12 '16 at 17:59
|
show 2 more comments
This is an old thread but I was looking for some answers for the same question and it seems lot of people didn't understand the question properly, so here my answer as of January 2019 and Debian 9.6
Rhythmbox 3.4.1 / Banshee 2.6.2 use MusicBrainz (so, they dont help)
VLC 3.0.3 is not using MusicBrainz, it uses FreeDB and has better results (at least for my CDs). Unfortunately, riping is cumbersome (just found some old basic lua script)
Asunder 2.8 also uses FreeDB explicitly and it works fine -just as a CD ripper. additionally
My solution for now: Asunder for CD rip only, then a Music Player (like Quod Libet or Clementine)
add a comment |
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There are players that can rip audio CDs, but one should consider the fact that this procedure may be tricky, not all are equally good, and specialized tools would fit the purpose better: Sound Juicer and Asunder in Gnome and related desktops, Audex, SoundKonverter and Asunder in KDE.
One of the most striking difference between all these (whether players or separate ripping tools) comes with CDs for which the metadata is not easy to find. You may need to try different tools to get the proper track names, so it's better to have 2 or 3 different such tools installed. (From my experience, Deadbeef, Qmmp, Amarok and Asunder rarely miss.)
That said, the already mentioned Rhythmbox is fine, except in KDE. For KDE, see below. It can even read the CD-Text data (track info present on the CD itself that can be accessed offline but not all players can read)
Deadbeef can work very well on all desktops and it is very light.
To get the CDDB info, version 6.2 needs you to un-check the option "Prefer CD-Text over CDDB" (under Preferences-Plugins-Audio CD player-Configure) - because of a bug.
Deadbeef can also read CD-Text.
In the past some codecs needed to be installed - like so - possibly this is not needed, but you can test
sudo apt-get install faac flac lame musepack-tools vorbis-tools wavpack
To start an Audio CD directly in Deadbeef the command to use is deadbeef all.cda
. (That can be used in a launcher/icon etc.)
Wait for the CDDB metadata or CD-Text to be read. Before converting, you may select files and reload CDDB
To adjust converting settings, one cannot edit or remove the default configurations, but new ones can be created based on the default ones. Just select one of those as if to edit,
then select copy:
that will open the 'add new encoder' window. Make changes there (for example, for FLAC, level 8 is maximum compression), press ok and a new configuration is added.
More details in a special answer on this topic,here.
Banshee is still a good solution (but avoid it in KDE).
Once inserted, the Audio CD is displayed in the left pane. Select it, it will fetch the online track info. Press Import CD in the top right corner to rip. To set the ripping options right click Audio CD in the left pane, Audio CD Preferences (OR - Edit - Preferences in main menus), then: Source specific - Source - Audio CDs
You can chose between Wav, mp3, flac and ogg with various settings. It has a somewhat limited capacity of finding cd info online. Tracks go to ~./Music
folder.
Qmmp - present in repos, but it's better to install the latest version
sudo add-apt-repository ppa:forkotov02/ppa
sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get install qmmp qmmp-plugin-pack
It seems to lack an internal menu option to open audio CDs, but that can be easily fixed following this answer.
Enable converter and decoders plugins.
(At the plugins settings you can change also the interface: replacing the "skinned" Winamp-like user interface with the "simpler" one, which in fact is more fully-featured to easily access tabs, files and folders, etc. But the following does not depend on that.)
After opening the audio CD, Qmmp looks for proper names etc. Select them all, and go to 'Actions' -'Convert'.
Exaile version 3.4 and above can see the cd easily
The 14.04 version is 3.3 and lacks that. To install latest in 14.04:
sudo add-apt-repository -y ppa:nilarimogard/webupd8
sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get install exaile exaile-plugin-contextinfo exaile-plugin-ipod exaile-plugin-moodbar
Click Import CD button above the list and it will convert the cd to flac in ~./
It works fine in both KDE and Gnome&co.
In KDE.
Amarok.
Just inserting a cd and starting the player you get the Audio CD entry inside Media sources - Local Music pane.
Right-click cd title: 'Copy to collection' > 'Local collection'
There you can select formats and advanced options
Then you can set tags, location (default ./Music
), etc
Proceed, and you'll see the progress in the lower part of the player window.
Amarok can also read CD-Text. Ripping seems to take longer with this tool than with others.
Deadbeef is my favourite.
add a comment |
There are players that can rip audio CDs, but one should consider the fact that this procedure may be tricky, not all are equally good, and specialized tools would fit the purpose better: Sound Juicer and Asunder in Gnome and related desktops, Audex, SoundKonverter and Asunder in KDE.
One of the most striking difference between all these (whether players or separate ripping tools) comes with CDs for which the metadata is not easy to find. You may need to try different tools to get the proper track names, so it's better to have 2 or 3 different such tools installed. (From my experience, Deadbeef, Qmmp, Amarok and Asunder rarely miss.)
That said, the already mentioned Rhythmbox is fine, except in KDE. For KDE, see below. It can even read the CD-Text data (track info present on the CD itself that can be accessed offline but not all players can read)
Deadbeef can work very well on all desktops and it is very light.
To get the CDDB info, version 6.2 needs you to un-check the option "Prefer CD-Text over CDDB" (under Preferences-Plugins-Audio CD player-Configure) - because of a bug.
Deadbeef can also read CD-Text.
In the past some codecs needed to be installed - like so - possibly this is not needed, but you can test
sudo apt-get install faac flac lame musepack-tools vorbis-tools wavpack
To start an Audio CD directly in Deadbeef the command to use is deadbeef all.cda
. (That can be used in a launcher/icon etc.)
Wait for the CDDB metadata or CD-Text to be read. Before converting, you may select files and reload CDDB
To adjust converting settings, one cannot edit or remove the default configurations, but new ones can be created based on the default ones. Just select one of those as if to edit,
then select copy:
that will open the 'add new encoder' window. Make changes there (for example, for FLAC, level 8 is maximum compression), press ok and a new configuration is added.
More details in a special answer on this topic,here.
Banshee is still a good solution (but avoid it in KDE).
Once inserted, the Audio CD is displayed in the left pane. Select it, it will fetch the online track info. Press Import CD in the top right corner to rip. To set the ripping options right click Audio CD in the left pane, Audio CD Preferences (OR - Edit - Preferences in main menus), then: Source specific - Source - Audio CDs
You can chose between Wav, mp3, flac and ogg with various settings. It has a somewhat limited capacity of finding cd info online. Tracks go to ~./Music
folder.
Qmmp - present in repos, but it's better to install the latest version
sudo add-apt-repository ppa:forkotov02/ppa
sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get install qmmp qmmp-plugin-pack
It seems to lack an internal menu option to open audio CDs, but that can be easily fixed following this answer.
Enable converter and decoders plugins.
(At the plugins settings you can change also the interface: replacing the "skinned" Winamp-like user interface with the "simpler" one, which in fact is more fully-featured to easily access tabs, files and folders, etc. But the following does not depend on that.)
After opening the audio CD, Qmmp looks for proper names etc. Select them all, and go to 'Actions' -'Convert'.
Exaile version 3.4 and above can see the cd easily
The 14.04 version is 3.3 and lacks that. To install latest in 14.04:
sudo add-apt-repository -y ppa:nilarimogard/webupd8
sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get install exaile exaile-plugin-contextinfo exaile-plugin-ipod exaile-plugin-moodbar
Click Import CD button above the list and it will convert the cd to flac in ~./
It works fine in both KDE and Gnome&co.
In KDE.
Amarok.
Just inserting a cd and starting the player you get the Audio CD entry inside Media sources - Local Music pane.
Right-click cd title: 'Copy to collection' > 'Local collection'
There you can select formats and advanced options
Then you can set tags, location (default ./Music
), etc
Proceed, and you'll see the progress in the lower part of the player window.
Amarok can also read CD-Text. Ripping seems to take longer with this tool than with others.
Deadbeef is my favourite.
add a comment |
There are players that can rip audio CDs, but one should consider the fact that this procedure may be tricky, not all are equally good, and specialized tools would fit the purpose better: Sound Juicer and Asunder in Gnome and related desktops, Audex, SoundKonverter and Asunder in KDE.
One of the most striking difference between all these (whether players or separate ripping tools) comes with CDs for which the metadata is not easy to find. You may need to try different tools to get the proper track names, so it's better to have 2 or 3 different such tools installed. (From my experience, Deadbeef, Qmmp, Amarok and Asunder rarely miss.)
That said, the already mentioned Rhythmbox is fine, except in KDE. For KDE, see below. It can even read the CD-Text data (track info present on the CD itself that can be accessed offline but not all players can read)
Deadbeef can work very well on all desktops and it is very light.
To get the CDDB info, version 6.2 needs you to un-check the option "Prefer CD-Text over CDDB" (under Preferences-Plugins-Audio CD player-Configure) - because of a bug.
Deadbeef can also read CD-Text.
In the past some codecs needed to be installed - like so - possibly this is not needed, but you can test
sudo apt-get install faac flac lame musepack-tools vorbis-tools wavpack
To start an Audio CD directly in Deadbeef the command to use is deadbeef all.cda
. (That can be used in a launcher/icon etc.)
Wait for the CDDB metadata or CD-Text to be read. Before converting, you may select files and reload CDDB
To adjust converting settings, one cannot edit or remove the default configurations, but new ones can be created based on the default ones. Just select one of those as if to edit,
then select copy:
that will open the 'add new encoder' window. Make changes there (for example, for FLAC, level 8 is maximum compression), press ok and a new configuration is added.
More details in a special answer on this topic,here.
Banshee is still a good solution (but avoid it in KDE).
Once inserted, the Audio CD is displayed in the left pane. Select it, it will fetch the online track info. Press Import CD in the top right corner to rip. To set the ripping options right click Audio CD in the left pane, Audio CD Preferences (OR - Edit - Preferences in main menus), then: Source specific - Source - Audio CDs
You can chose between Wav, mp3, flac and ogg with various settings. It has a somewhat limited capacity of finding cd info online. Tracks go to ~./Music
folder.
Qmmp - present in repos, but it's better to install the latest version
sudo add-apt-repository ppa:forkotov02/ppa
sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get install qmmp qmmp-plugin-pack
It seems to lack an internal menu option to open audio CDs, but that can be easily fixed following this answer.
Enable converter and decoders plugins.
(At the plugins settings you can change also the interface: replacing the "skinned" Winamp-like user interface with the "simpler" one, which in fact is more fully-featured to easily access tabs, files and folders, etc. But the following does not depend on that.)
After opening the audio CD, Qmmp looks for proper names etc. Select them all, and go to 'Actions' -'Convert'.
Exaile version 3.4 and above can see the cd easily
The 14.04 version is 3.3 and lacks that. To install latest in 14.04:
sudo add-apt-repository -y ppa:nilarimogard/webupd8
sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get install exaile exaile-plugin-contextinfo exaile-plugin-ipod exaile-plugin-moodbar
Click Import CD button above the list and it will convert the cd to flac in ~./
It works fine in both KDE and Gnome&co.
In KDE.
Amarok.
Just inserting a cd and starting the player you get the Audio CD entry inside Media sources - Local Music pane.
Right-click cd title: 'Copy to collection' > 'Local collection'
There you can select formats and advanced options
Then you can set tags, location (default ./Music
), etc
Proceed, and you'll see the progress in the lower part of the player window.
Amarok can also read CD-Text. Ripping seems to take longer with this tool than with others.
Deadbeef is my favourite.
There are players that can rip audio CDs, but one should consider the fact that this procedure may be tricky, not all are equally good, and specialized tools would fit the purpose better: Sound Juicer and Asunder in Gnome and related desktops, Audex, SoundKonverter and Asunder in KDE.
One of the most striking difference between all these (whether players or separate ripping tools) comes with CDs for which the metadata is not easy to find. You may need to try different tools to get the proper track names, so it's better to have 2 or 3 different such tools installed. (From my experience, Deadbeef, Qmmp, Amarok and Asunder rarely miss.)
That said, the already mentioned Rhythmbox is fine, except in KDE. For KDE, see below. It can even read the CD-Text data (track info present on the CD itself that can be accessed offline but not all players can read)
Deadbeef can work very well on all desktops and it is very light.
To get the CDDB info, version 6.2 needs you to un-check the option "Prefer CD-Text over CDDB" (under Preferences-Plugins-Audio CD player-Configure) - because of a bug.
Deadbeef can also read CD-Text.
In the past some codecs needed to be installed - like so - possibly this is not needed, but you can test
sudo apt-get install faac flac lame musepack-tools vorbis-tools wavpack
To start an Audio CD directly in Deadbeef the command to use is deadbeef all.cda
. (That can be used in a launcher/icon etc.)
Wait for the CDDB metadata or CD-Text to be read. Before converting, you may select files and reload CDDB
To adjust converting settings, one cannot edit or remove the default configurations, but new ones can be created based on the default ones. Just select one of those as if to edit,
then select copy:
that will open the 'add new encoder' window. Make changes there (for example, for FLAC, level 8 is maximum compression), press ok and a new configuration is added.
More details in a special answer on this topic,here.
Banshee is still a good solution (but avoid it in KDE).
Once inserted, the Audio CD is displayed in the left pane. Select it, it will fetch the online track info. Press Import CD in the top right corner to rip. To set the ripping options right click Audio CD in the left pane, Audio CD Preferences (OR - Edit - Preferences in main menus), then: Source specific - Source - Audio CDs
You can chose between Wav, mp3, flac and ogg with various settings. It has a somewhat limited capacity of finding cd info online. Tracks go to ~./Music
folder.
Qmmp - present in repos, but it's better to install the latest version
sudo add-apt-repository ppa:forkotov02/ppa
sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get install qmmp qmmp-plugin-pack
It seems to lack an internal menu option to open audio CDs, but that can be easily fixed following this answer.
Enable converter and decoders plugins.
(At the plugins settings you can change also the interface: replacing the "skinned" Winamp-like user interface with the "simpler" one, which in fact is more fully-featured to easily access tabs, files and folders, etc. But the following does not depend on that.)
After opening the audio CD, Qmmp looks for proper names etc. Select them all, and go to 'Actions' -'Convert'.
Exaile version 3.4 and above can see the cd easily
The 14.04 version is 3.3 and lacks that. To install latest in 14.04:
sudo add-apt-repository -y ppa:nilarimogard/webupd8
sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get install exaile exaile-plugin-contextinfo exaile-plugin-ipod exaile-plugin-moodbar
Click Import CD button above the list and it will convert the cd to flac in ~./
It works fine in both KDE and Gnome&co.
In KDE.
Amarok.
Just inserting a cd and starting the player you get the Audio CD entry inside Media sources - Local Music pane.
Right-click cd title: 'Copy to collection' > 'Local collection'
There you can select formats and advanced options
Then you can set tags, location (default ./Music
), etc
Proceed, and you'll see the progress in the lower part of the player window.
Amarok can also read CD-Text. Ripping seems to take longer with this tool than with others.
Deadbeef is my favourite.
edited Apr 13 '17 at 12:37
Community♦
1
1
answered Jan 12 '16 at 17:16
cipricuscipricus
10.2k47172342
10.2k47172342
add a comment |
add a comment |
Rhythmbox may be ideal - I think it is/was the default music player for Gnome. It sorts the library of music, so you can browse it easily:
Can search it:
As well as organise playlists, show visualizations, track change notifications, crossfade tracks, and use various plugins:
It can also rip Music from CDs - CDs should show under 'Devices', and can be ripped by pressing 'Extract' - it will also notify if you have previously ripped the CD and will overwrite any changes:
The CD will be saved under the Music directory, under the appropriate Artist/Album values:
N.B. done with a bad exemplar CD (no track info at all), and Rhythmbox 2.99.1
Yeah, Rhythmbox is the Ubuntu/Unity default. But does it implement CDDB lookup? Tell me if I'm wrong, but I don't think so.
– s3lph
Oct 27 '14 at 19:40
Depends on what you want to look up - it looks up cover art, and can find it most of the time - other info can be found via the context pane plugin, which seems to require last.fm sync, otherwise just shows links to Allmusic, Wikipedia, etc.
– Wilf
Oct 27 '14 at 21:48
Yes, actually I want to fetch the song information: Artist, Album, Name, etc. and embed it as ID3 tags. Can Rhythmbox do this without last.fm?
– s3lph
Oct 28 '14 at 20:05
is it limited to ogg?
– cipricus
Jan 12 '16 at 17:04
Rhythmbox can fetch online media tags
– cipricus
Jan 12 '16 at 17:59
|
show 2 more comments
Rhythmbox may be ideal - I think it is/was the default music player for Gnome. It sorts the library of music, so you can browse it easily:
Can search it:
As well as organise playlists, show visualizations, track change notifications, crossfade tracks, and use various plugins:
It can also rip Music from CDs - CDs should show under 'Devices', and can be ripped by pressing 'Extract' - it will also notify if you have previously ripped the CD and will overwrite any changes:
The CD will be saved under the Music directory, under the appropriate Artist/Album values:
N.B. done with a bad exemplar CD (no track info at all), and Rhythmbox 2.99.1
Yeah, Rhythmbox is the Ubuntu/Unity default. But does it implement CDDB lookup? Tell me if I'm wrong, but I don't think so.
– s3lph
Oct 27 '14 at 19:40
Depends on what you want to look up - it looks up cover art, and can find it most of the time - other info can be found via the context pane plugin, which seems to require last.fm sync, otherwise just shows links to Allmusic, Wikipedia, etc.
– Wilf
Oct 27 '14 at 21:48
Yes, actually I want to fetch the song information: Artist, Album, Name, etc. and embed it as ID3 tags. Can Rhythmbox do this without last.fm?
– s3lph
Oct 28 '14 at 20:05
is it limited to ogg?
– cipricus
Jan 12 '16 at 17:04
Rhythmbox can fetch online media tags
– cipricus
Jan 12 '16 at 17:59
|
show 2 more comments
Rhythmbox may be ideal - I think it is/was the default music player for Gnome. It sorts the library of music, so you can browse it easily:
Can search it:
As well as organise playlists, show visualizations, track change notifications, crossfade tracks, and use various plugins:
It can also rip Music from CDs - CDs should show under 'Devices', and can be ripped by pressing 'Extract' - it will also notify if you have previously ripped the CD and will overwrite any changes:
The CD will be saved under the Music directory, under the appropriate Artist/Album values:
N.B. done with a bad exemplar CD (no track info at all), and Rhythmbox 2.99.1
Rhythmbox may be ideal - I think it is/was the default music player for Gnome. It sorts the library of music, so you can browse it easily:
Can search it:
As well as organise playlists, show visualizations, track change notifications, crossfade tracks, and use various plugins:
It can also rip Music from CDs - CDs should show under 'Devices', and can be ripped by pressing 'Extract' - it will also notify if you have previously ripped the CD and will overwrite any changes:
The CD will be saved under the Music directory, under the appropriate Artist/Album values:
N.B. done with a bad exemplar CD (no track info at all), and Rhythmbox 2.99.1
answered Oct 26 '14 at 21:24
WilfWilf
21.4k1067129
21.4k1067129
Yeah, Rhythmbox is the Ubuntu/Unity default. But does it implement CDDB lookup? Tell me if I'm wrong, but I don't think so.
– s3lph
Oct 27 '14 at 19:40
Depends on what you want to look up - it looks up cover art, and can find it most of the time - other info can be found via the context pane plugin, which seems to require last.fm sync, otherwise just shows links to Allmusic, Wikipedia, etc.
– Wilf
Oct 27 '14 at 21:48
Yes, actually I want to fetch the song information: Artist, Album, Name, etc. and embed it as ID3 tags. Can Rhythmbox do this without last.fm?
– s3lph
Oct 28 '14 at 20:05
is it limited to ogg?
– cipricus
Jan 12 '16 at 17:04
Rhythmbox can fetch online media tags
– cipricus
Jan 12 '16 at 17:59
|
show 2 more comments
Yeah, Rhythmbox is the Ubuntu/Unity default. But does it implement CDDB lookup? Tell me if I'm wrong, but I don't think so.
– s3lph
Oct 27 '14 at 19:40
Depends on what you want to look up - it looks up cover art, and can find it most of the time - other info can be found via the context pane plugin, which seems to require last.fm sync, otherwise just shows links to Allmusic, Wikipedia, etc.
– Wilf
Oct 27 '14 at 21:48
Yes, actually I want to fetch the song information: Artist, Album, Name, etc. and embed it as ID3 tags. Can Rhythmbox do this without last.fm?
– s3lph
Oct 28 '14 at 20:05
is it limited to ogg?
– cipricus
Jan 12 '16 at 17:04
Rhythmbox can fetch online media tags
– cipricus
Jan 12 '16 at 17:59
Yeah, Rhythmbox is the Ubuntu/Unity default. But does it implement CDDB lookup? Tell me if I'm wrong, but I don't think so.
– s3lph
Oct 27 '14 at 19:40
Yeah, Rhythmbox is the Ubuntu/Unity default. But does it implement CDDB lookup? Tell me if I'm wrong, but I don't think so.
– s3lph
Oct 27 '14 at 19:40
Depends on what you want to look up - it looks up cover art, and can find it most of the time - other info can be found via the context pane plugin, which seems to require last.fm sync, otherwise just shows links to Allmusic, Wikipedia, etc.
– Wilf
Oct 27 '14 at 21:48
Depends on what you want to look up - it looks up cover art, and can find it most of the time - other info can be found via the context pane plugin, which seems to require last.fm sync, otherwise just shows links to Allmusic, Wikipedia, etc.
– Wilf
Oct 27 '14 at 21:48
Yes, actually I want to fetch the song information: Artist, Album, Name, etc. and embed it as ID3 tags. Can Rhythmbox do this without last.fm?
– s3lph
Oct 28 '14 at 20:05
Yes, actually I want to fetch the song information: Artist, Album, Name, etc. and embed it as ID3 tags. Can Rhythmbox do this without last.fm?
– s3lph
Oct 28 '14 at 20:05
is it limited to ogg?
– cipricus
Jan 12 '16 at 17:04
is it limited to ogg?
– cipricus
Jan 12 '16 at 17:04
Rhythmbox can fetch online media tags
– cipricus
Jan 12 '16 at 17:59
Rhythmbox can fetch online media tags
– cipricus
Jan 12 '16 at 17:59
|
show 2 more comments
This is an old thread but I was looking for some answers for the same question and it seems lot of people didn't understand the question properly, so here my answer as of January 2019 and Debian 9.6
Rhythmbox 3.4.1 / Banshee 2.6.2 use MusicBrainz (so, they dont help)
VLC 3.0.3 is not using MusicBrainz, it uses FreeDB and has better results (at least for my CDs). Unfortunately, riping is cumbersome (just found some old basic lua script)
Asunder 2.8 also uses FreeDB explicitly and it works fine -just as a CD ripper. additionally
My solution for now: Asunder for CD rip only, then a Music Player (like Quod Libet or Clementine)
add a comment |
This is an old thread but I was looking for some answers for the same question and it seems lot of people didn't understand the question properly, so here my answer as of January 2019 and Debian 9.6
Rhythmbox 3.4.1 / Banshee 2.6.2 use MusicBrainz (so, they dont help)
VLC 3.0.3 is not using MusicBrainz, it uses FreeDB and has better results (at least for my CDs). Unfortunately, riping is cumbersome (just found some old basic lua script)
Asunder 2.8 also uses FreeDB explicitly and it works fine -just as a CD ripper. additionally
My solution for now: Asunder for CD rip only, then a Music Player (like Quod Libet or Clementine)
add a comment |
This is an old thread but I was looking for some answers for the same question and it seems lot of people didn't understand the question properly, so here my answer as of January 2019 and Debian 9.6
Rhythmbox 3.4.1 / Banshee 2.6.2 use MusicBrainz (so, they dont help)
VLC 3.0.3 is not using MusicBrainz, it uses FreeDB and has better results (at least for my CDs). Unfortunately, riping is cumbersome (just found some old basic lua script)
Asunder 2.8 also uses FreeDB explicitly and it works fine -just as a CD ripper. additionally
My solution for now: Asunder for CD rip only, then a Music Player (like Quod Libet or Clementine)
This is an old thread but I was looking for some answers for the same question and it seems lot of people didn't understand the question properly, so here my answer as of January 2019 and Debian 9.6
Rhythmbox 3.4.1 / Banshee 2.6.2 use MusicBrainz (so, they dont help)
VLC 3.0.3 is not using MusicBrainz, it uses FreeDB and has better results (at least for my CDs). Unfortunately, riping is cumbersome (just found some old basic lua script)
Asunder 2.8 also uses FreeDB explicitly and it works fine -just as a CD ripper. additionally
My solution for now: Asunder for CD rip only, then a Music Player (like Quod Libet or Clementine)
edited Jan 6 at 15:01
answered Jan 6 at 14:28
YaPYaP
112
112
add a comment |
add a comment |
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Although the below answer is very helpful, it may be worth noting that Clementine now supports CD ripping.
– Kyle Barbour
Mar 19 '17 at 1:13