file:https://elpa.gnu.org/packages/listen.svg
This package aims to provide a simple audio/music player for Emacs. It should "just work," with little-to-no configuration, have intuitive commands, and be easily extended and customized. (Contrast to setting up EMMS, or having to configure external players like MPD.) A Transient menu, under the command listen, is the primary entry point.
The only external dependency is VLC, which is currently the only player backend that is supported. (Other backends may easily be added; see library listen-vlc for example.) Track metadata is read using EMMS’s native Elisp metadata library, which has been imported into this package.
Queues are provided as the means to play consecutive tracks, and they are shown in a vtable-based view buffer. They are persisted between sessions using the persist library, and they may be bookmarked.
The primary interface to one’s music library is through the filesystem, by selecting a file to play, or by adding files and directories to a queue. Although MPD is not required, support is provided for finding files from a local MPD server’s library using MPD’s metadata searching.
A simple "library" view is provided that shows a list of files organized into a hierarchy by genre, date, artist, album, etc. (This will be made more configurable and useful in the future.)
Note a silly limitation: a track may be present in a queue only once (but who would want to have a track more than once in a playlist).
Next: Configuration, Previous: Screenshots, Up: listen.el [Contents]
Requirements:
ffprobe (part of FFmpeg) is used to read tracks’ duration when available.
Next: Git, Up: Installation [Contents]
Listen.el is published in GNU ELPA as listen, so it may be installed in Emacs with the command M-x package-install RET listen RET. This is the recommended way to install Listen.el, as it will install the current stable release.
The latest development build may be installed from ELPA-devel or from Git (see below).
Previous: GNU ELPA, Up: Installation [Contents]
The master branch of the Git repository is intended to be usable at all times; only minor bugs are expected to be found in it before a new stable release is made.
To install, it is recommended to use quelpa-use-package, like this (using this helpful command for upgrading versions):
;; Install and load `quelpa-use-package'. (package-install 'quelpa-use-package) (require 'quelpa-use-package) ;; Install Listen. (use-package listen :quelpa (listen :fetcher github :repo "alphapapa/listen.el"))
One might also use systems like Elpaca or Straight (which is also used by DOOM), but the author cannot offer support for them.
Next: Usage, Previous: Installation, Up: listen.el [Contents]
Listen is intended to work with little-to-no configuration. You can set the listen-directory to the location of your music library if it’s not at ~/Music. See M-x customize-group RET listen RET.
Next: Changelog, Previous: Configuration, Up: listen.el [Contents]
Use the command listen to show the Transient menu. From there, it is–hopefully–self-explanatory. Please feel free to give feedback if it doesn’t seem so. For more information, see the following sections.
While listen can simply play one track and stop, playing multiple tracks sequentially is provided by queues (what other players may call playlists). A queue is a list of tracks, each of which is backed by a file on disk, and which may have associated metadata (provided by reading the file in Emacs with the listen-info library, or from an external source, like an MPD server).
Queues are automatically persisted to disk in the variable listen-queues.
A new, empty queue may be made with the command listen-queue-new, but it’s usually more convenient to use a command that adds tracks to a queue and enter a new queue name.
A queue’s tracks may be de-duplicated using the command listen-queue-deduplicate. Tracks that appear to have the same metadata (artist, album, and title, compared case-insensitively) are de-duplicated. Also, any tracks no longer backed by a file are removed.
Next: Queue buffer, Up: Queues [Contents]
Tracks can be added to a queue from various sources using these commands:
listen-queue-add-files. Individual files may be chosen, or a directory may be, which will be searched recursively for tracks, which are added to the selected queue.
listen-queue-add-from-mpd. An MPD search query will be read with completion, and matching tracks are added to the selected queue.
listen-queue-add-from-playlist-file. The playlist file is read, and its tracks are added to the selected queue.
Next: Queue list buffer, Previous: Adding tracks to a queue, Up: Queues [Contents]
A queue may be shown in a buffer with the command listen-queue, which shows its tracks in a (vtable)vtable with columns for metadata and filename.
In the buffer, you can use these commands:
| Listen to track | listen-queue-play (RET) |
| Move point forward/backward | forward-line (n) / previous-line (p) |
| Move track forward | listen-queue-transpose-forward (N) |
| Move track backward | listen-queue-transpose-backward (P) |
| Kill track | listen-queue-kill-track (C-k) |
| Yank track | listen-queue-yank (C-y) |
| Show track’s metadata | listen-view-track (m) |
| Jump to track’s file in Dired | listen-jump (j) |
| Show tracks (at point or selected) in library buffer | listen-library-from-queue (l) |
| Run shell command on tracks (at point or selected) | listen-queue-shell-command (!) |
| Order the queue by column at point | listen-queue-order-by (o) |
| Shuffle the queue | listen-queue-shuffle (s) |
| Revert the queue buffer | listen-queue-revert (g) |
| Revert queue’s tracks from disk | C-u g |
| Pause the player | listen-pause (SPC) |
| Show the menu | listen-menu (?) |
Queue buffers may be bookmarked with bookmark-set (C-x r m). The bookmark record refers to the queue by name, so if the queue is renamed or discarded, the bookmark will remain.
Previous: Queue buffer, Up: Queues [Contents]
The queue list buffer may be shown with the command listen-queue-list. In the list buffer, you can use these commands:
| Show queue’s buffer | listen-queue (RET) |
| Move point forward/backward | forward-line (n) / previous-line (p) |
| Rename a queue | listen-queue-rename (R) |
| Discard a queue | listen-queue-discard (C-k) |
| Show queue’s tracks in library buffer | listen-library-from-queue (l) |
| Revert the queue list | listen-queue-list (g) |
| Pause the player | listen-pause (SPC) |
| Show the menu | listen-menu (?) |
To help with exploring and managing a music library, listen provides various "library" features. Tracks can be passed between library and queue buffers and operated on with similar commands and bindings.
listen does not maintain its own database of audio files; they are simply read from the filesystem as needed. But if a local MPD server is available, tracks can be loaded from its database (which does a fine job of indexing audio files and their metadata); this is generally much faster, because it avoids having to read tracks’ metadata with Emacs Lisp or their durations with ffprobe.
listen does not provide features to modify tracks’ metadata, but it provides commands to run shell commands on tracks’ filenames, which works well with external tools like Picard.
A library buffer provides a hierarchical view of tracks grouped by their metadata using (taxy)Taxy, rendered with (magit-section)Magit Section. Each section can be folded, and it shows the number of tracks in it and its subgroups.
Tracks from various sources can be shown in a library using these commands:
listen-library. Individual files may be chosen, or a directory may be, which will be searched recursively for tracks.
listen-library-from-mpd. An MPD search query will be read with completion, and matching tracks are read from the MPD server.
listen-library-from-playlist-file. Tracks are read from the given playlist file.
In the library buffer, you can use these commands:
| Listen to tracks | listen-library-play (RET) |
| Add tracks to queue | listen-library-to-queue (a) |
| Move point forward/backward | forward-line (n) / previous-line (p) |
| Show track’s metadata | listen-library-view-track (m) |
| Jump to track’s file in Dired | listen-library-jump (j) |
| Run shell command on tracks | listen-library-shell-command (!) |
| Revert the library buffer | listen-library-revert (g) |
| Pause the player | listen-pause (SPC) |
| Show the menu | listen-menu (?) |
Library buffers may be bookmarked with bookmark-set (C-x r m). The bookmark record refers to the buffer by the way it was created (e.g. the filename paths, queue name, MPD query, or playlist file the tracks came from), so jumping to the bookmark will show an updated view, as if calling the original command with the same arguments.
listen currently supports audio playback via the VLC backend. Internally, any number of simultaneous player instances could be controlled, but listen’s UI provides the means to control one at a time.
Controlling the player is mainly done through the main (transient)Transient menu, through the command listen. However, all of the commands provided in it are also available as interactive commands, which could be bound by the user in any keymap (see, e.g. M-x apropos-command RET ^listen- RET).
The player is run in a child process, which is started when playback begins. The listen-quit command terminates the player process.
The listen-volume command is used to set the current player’s volume. Its argument should be an integer percentage. Some players, e.g. VLC, may allow settings above 100% to boost output beyond normal levels.
Next: Repeat modes, Previous: Volume, Up: Players [Contents]
The listen-seek command is used to seek to a position in the current track. Its argument should be a timestamp in MM:SS format, and it may include a - or + prefix to indicate a position relative to the current one.
Three repeat modes are provided, controlled by the option listen-queue-repeat-mode, which may have these values:
nilNo repeating. When the last track in the current queue finishes playing, playback stops.
queueThe current queue is repeated when its last track finishes playing.
shuffleWhen the last track in the current queue finishes playing, the queue is shuffled and played again.
The repeat mode is most easily set using the commands in the listen menu.
The listen-mode minor mode runs a timer which plays the next track in the current queue when a track finishes playing (when playing a queue). It is automatically activated when playing a queue. It also shows the current track in the global-mode-string, which may be displayed in the mode line or tab bar.
listen’s playback.
Next: Development, Previous: Usage, Up: listen.el [Contents]
Released without additional changes due to change in ELPA recipe.
Fixes
listen / listen-menu commands (See Transient issue. Thanks to Jonas Bernoulli.).
Fixes
listen / listen-menu commands.
Additions
listen-queue-list buffer can be bookmarked.
mood metadata tag in MP3 files (added in ID3v2.4; other filetypes need no specific support).
Changes
listen-lighter-title-max-length (because the format-spec specifier used in listen-lighter-format does not add an ellipsis where truncation occurs).
Fixes
listen-queue-add-from-mpd.
ffprobe timeout for a single track.
Additions
listen-lighter-format now allows customizing the mode line lighter.
Changes
listen-queue switches to existing queue buffers without reverting them.
qq command exits the transient.
Fixes
Additions
Changes
listen-queue-add-files no longer plays the queue automatically.
listen-library-play-or-add renamed to listen-library-play, and it now plays the selected queue when playing multiple tracks.
listen-album slants italic.
Fixes
Fixes
Additions
listen-queue-list shows a list of queues.
listen-jump (bound to j in queue and library buffers) jumps to the track at point in a Dired buffer.
listen-track-view shows a track’s complete metadata in a table view.
listen-queue-delay-mode plays a queue with a configurable, random delay between tracks.
listen-queue-repeat-mode (also settable in listen-menu) allows repeating a queue in-order or shuffled.
listen-lighter-extra-functions allows displaying extra information in the listen-mode lighter.
listen-track-end-functions allows running functions when a track finishes playing.
Changes
originalyear or originaldate metadata fields in preference to date (which seems generally more useful, as the date field may contain a full date, and sometimes of a later release).
Fixes
listen-queue-deduplicate first removes any tracks not backed by a file.
Additions
listen-queue-deduplicate removes duplicate tracks from a queue (by comparing artist, album, and title metadata case-insensitively).
ffprobe and show in library and queue views.
? to open the listen Transient menu in library and queue views.
Fixes
listen command.
Additions
listen-library-from-mpd shows tracks selected from MPD in a library view.
listen-library-from-queue shows tracks selected from a queue buffer in a library view.
listen-library-from-playlist-file shows tracks from an M3U playlist in a library view.
listen-queue-add-from-playlist-file adds tracks from an M3U playlist file to a queue.
Changes
completing-read-multiple.
listen-queue doesn’t recreate its buffer when already open.
listen Transient menu.
listen-queue-complete accepts argument :allow-new-p to return a new queue if the entered name doesn’t match an existing one.
Fixes
Credits
Additions
listen-queue-jump jumps to the currently playing track in the queue.
listen-queue-shell-command runs a shell command on the tracks selected in the queue.
Fixes
Feedback and patches are welcome.
Next: Known issues, Up: Development [Contents]
Listen.el is published in GNU ELPA and is considered part of GNU Emacs. Therefore, cumulative contributions of more than 15 lines of code require that the author assign copyright of such contributions to the FSF. Authors who are interested in doing so may contact assign@gnu.org to request the appropriate form.
Previous: Copyright assignment, Up: Development [Contents]
vtable library (see bug #69837).