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kew

GitHub license

Listen to music in the terminal.

kew (/kjuː/) is a command-line music player for Linux.

Features

  • Search a music library with partial titles.
  • Creates a playlist based on a matched directory.
  • Control the player with previous, next and pause.
  • Edit the playlist by adding and removing songs.
  • Supports gapless playback (between files of the same format and type).
  • Supports MP3, FLAC, MPEG-4 (AAC, M4A, MP4), OPUS, OGG and WAV audio.
  • Private, no data is collected by kew.

Installing

Packaging status

Installing in Debian, Ubuntu

If you have apt in your system use:

$ sudo apt install kew

Installing via AUR

On Arch Linux, and Arch-based distributions, kew can be found in the AUR. Install with pamac or an AUR helper like yay:

$ yay kew-git

Or

$ yay kew

Installing via Brew

For Homebrew user, you can install kew with:

$ brew install kew

Installing with quick install script

To quickly install kew, just copy and paste this to your terminal (if you have curl installed):

sudo bash -c "curl https://raw.githubusercontent.com/ravachol/kew/main/install.sh | bash"

Please note that this script might do a system update before installing kew.

Installing everything manually

kew dependencies are:

  • FFmpeg
  • FFTW
  • Chafa
  • FreeImage
  • libopus
  • opusfile
  • libvorbis
  • pkg-config
  • glib2.0 and AVFormat. These should be installed with the others, if not install them.

Install FFmpeg, FFTW, Chafa and FreeImage using your distro's package manager. For instance:

apt install ffmpeg libfftw3-dev libopus-dev libopusfile-dev libvorbis-dev git gcc make libchafa-dev libfreeimage-dev libavformat-dev libglib2.0-dev

Or:

pacman -Syu ffmpeg fftw git gcc make chafa freeimage glib2 opus opusfile libvorbis

Then run this (either git clone or unzip a release zip into a folder of your choice):

git clone https://github.com/ravachol/kew.git
cd kew
make
sudo make install

A sixel (or equivalent) capable terminal is recommended, like Konsole, Wezterm, or kitty, to display images properly.

For a complete list of capable terminals, see this page: Sixels in Terminal (github.com).

And for

Uninstalling

sudo make uninstall

Usage

In case you don't have a "Music" folder in your home folder, the first thing to do is to tell kew the path to your music library (you only need to do this once):

kew path "/home/joe/Musik/"

Now run kew and provide a partial name of a track or directory:

kew cure great

This command plays all songs from "The Cure Greatest Hits" directory, provided it's in your music library.

kew returns the first directory or file whose name matches the string you provide. It works best when your music library is organized in this way: artist folder->album folder(s)->track(s).

Some Examples:

kew (starting kew with no arguments opens the library view where can choose what to play)

kew all (plays all songs (up to 20 000) in your library, shuffled)

kew moonlight son (finds and plays moonlight sonata)

kew moon (finds and plays moonlight sonata)

kew beet (finds and plays all music files under "beethoven" directory)

kew dir <album name> (sometimes it's necessary to specify it's a directory you want)

kew song <song> (or a song)

kew list <playlist> (or a playlist)

kew shuffle <album name> (shuffles the playlist)

kew artistA:artistB:artistC (plays all three artists, shuffled)

kew --help, -? or -h

kew --version or -v

kew --nocover

kew --noui (completely hides the UI)

kew -q <song>, --quitonstop (exits after finishing playing the playlist)

kew -e <song>, --exact (specifies you want an exact (but not case sensitive) match, of for instance an album)

kew . loads kew.m3u

Put single-quotes inside quotes "guns n' roses"

Key Bindings

  • Use +, - keys to adjust the volume.
  • Use , or h, l keys to switch tracks.
  • Space, P to toggle pause.
  • F2 to show/hide the playlist and information about kew.
  • F3 to show/hide the library.
  • F4 to show/hide the track view.
  • F5 to show/hide key bindings.
  • u to update the library.
  • v to toggle the spectrum visualizer.
  • c to toggle album covers.
  • i to switch between using your regular color scheme or colors derived from the track cover.
  • b to toggle album covers drawn in ascii or as a normal image.
  • r to repeat the current song.
  • s to shuffle the playlist.
  • a to seek back.
  • d to seek forward.
  • x to save the currently loaded playlist to a m3u file in your music folder.
  • gg go to first song.
  • number +G, g or Enter, go to specific song number in the playlist.
  • g go to last song.
  • . to add current song to kew.m3u (run with "kew .").
  • q to quit.

Configuration

kew will create a config file, kewrc, in your default config directory for instance ~/.config/. There you can change key bindings, number of bars in the visualizer and whether to use the album cover for color, or your regular color scheme (default). You can also change the default color of the app here. To edit this file please make sure you quit kew first.

License

Licensed under GPL. See LICENSE for more information.

Attributions

kew makes use of the following great open source projects:

Chafa by Petter Jansson - https://hpjansson.org/chafa/

FFmpeg by FFmpeg team - https://ffmpeg.org/

FFTW by Matteo Frigo and Steven G. Johnson - https://www.fftw.org/

Libopus by Opus - https://opus-codec.org/

Libvorbis by Xiph.org - https://xiph.org/

Miniaudio by David Reid - https://github.com/mackron/miniaudio

Img_To_Txt by Danny Burrows - https://github.com/danny-burrows/img_to_txt

Comments? Suggestions? Send mail to kew-music-player@proton.me.