Music is more important to me than any other form of media so I tend to have very specific needs. Let's talk about what we use and why. I'll admit that nothing on Linux has covered 100% of my needs and I reject the idea that I should adjust my needs to fit what can be done with Linux. When I started using Fooyin, it didn't have good support for video game music, but we screamed to the heavens and the legend, kode54, jumped in to help bring wide support for everything... it's now native. So, I think we should push for what we need and explore better ways to make that happen.
I'm really curious about MPD @chiefterror. There's a lot of cool front-ends as well. Maybe you will know if it works for me after I lay out what I need any why I use Foobar on windows and Fooyin on Linux.
Here's what I must have a player:
- The basics: auto playlists that can be organized by genre, artist, year, etc., album art, album art thumbnails
- Standard format support: opus (most important), aac, ogg, mp4, mp3, wav, FLAC, etc.
- Video game music formats: VGZ, VGM, SPC, MIDI, MOD, PSF, PSF2, MINI2SF, SSF
- Lyrics viewer
- Batch file conversion tools (convert FLAC to opus, etc.)
- Batch metadata & file rename tools (file operations in Foobar)
- External metadata tags (tags in a text file or something because many video game formats don't support saving metadata info to the file, which makes organization extremely messy... so external tags fix this)
- Support for custom playlists
- Ability to organize by date added or date last modified
- Ability to use a NAS for the library location
- File server so I can access my music remotely
- Metadata browser
- Artist bios (pulled from last.fm or something)
- Album Art downloader
- Replay gain adjustments by album or song
- Visualizations (I use old winamp milkdrop, etc. in Foobar2000 with a plugin and it's epic)

Here if fooyin (it's horizontal because I don't have a vertical monitor hooked up to my laptop)

Foobar2000 does 100% of what I need thanks to all the plugins. Fooyin is about 70% there, but I think it will evolve into the best player. It's way ahead of about 20 other programs on Linux (I spent a ton of time testing players).
However, MPD looks interesting. I couldn't figure out how good the support was for several things on my "must-have," list... and it looks like fooyin has better support for the video game formats I need. So, it might be that my needs don't align with what can currently be done with MPD... but it also looks like MPD is better in regard to allowing me to stream music to other devices.
Anyway, I hope this thread becomes something to help everyone find the player that specifically covers their needs.





