What’s your recommendation for listening to music privately?

My requirements are: open source desktop/web (Linux) and android app. I also want basically every song I would ever want.

I’m willing to pay just not on agregious amount of money.

If you are posting your recommendation please care to include the tradeoffs or any annoyances you got from it.

Thanks all!

  • Hugston Media Pro, comes with thousands tv and radio channels worldwide (with bookmarks), updated newsfeed (minute/hour/day), local music player for your downloaded songs/videos. If enough users are interested I can make it opensource :)

    • Lidarr + Tubifarry + Slskd: automated downloads and organization
    • Explo + listenbrainz: discover weekly replacement
    • Navidrome: Subsonic Music Server
    • Feishin: Linux Desktop client
    • Arpeggi: iOS mobile client (Yes Ik iOS on privacy sub. Can’t afford to switch yet and my family has been using iPhone since I was s a kid)

    Listenbrainz requires you to make what you listen to public as it is part of the open source project. If that is something you are worried about I think there are alternatives to explo that use last.fm but that is closed source as far as I know.

    As others have said, buy stuff from small bands on band camp or at shows or something and pirate from whoever you see fit.

    EDIT: I also should have noted, this is a self hosted setup that requires a server to be online unless you download your tracks to your client device. If you want a single device alternative, I am not personally sure what to recommend.

  • 8 hours

    I use Navidrome with Feishin on GNU/Linux and it works well. Furthermore, you can also check out Soulseek (Nicotine+ on GNU/Linux).

  • 14 hours

    If yt-dlp/Newpipe still works over a VPN then Spotube with ListenBrainz plugin is an option, but it’s extremely buggy and they’re working on a rewrite afaik. Or use another YT Music client, or download your music and use an offline player. If you have the time and resources to self-host that’s also an option of course.

  • Self-host Navidrome. Choose any of the clients that you like. Pirate stuff from big bands, buy stuff from smaller bands.

    Cons: You’d have to deal with storage and hosting and access from outside your house e.g. with Tailscale. You’d also have to tag incorrectly tagged songs (surprisingly common issue, sometimes pirates tag stuff better than the bands themselves)

    • Is there a way to use tailscale/similar software with mullvad aswell

      • Easier solution: some routers have built-in VPN access. Mine supports a Wireguard and OpenVPN tunnel directly into my network.

        As for incorrectly tagged media files, Picard can fingerprint and auto-tag your files in batch.

        • I got other people on my network who prefer faster internet speeds over privacy, sadly. And I dont wanna be rude and just force them to do something they don’t want to do. (Even if it’s for the greater good)

          Also attaching it to my router won’t work when I’m out travelling or away from home.

          Picard seems awesome btw.

          • I got other people on my network who prefer faster internet speeds over privacy, sadly. And I dont wanna be rude and just force them to do something they don’t want to do. (Even if it’s for the greater good)

            This would not impact internet speed for anyone else on your network. Whether they’re connected via Ethernet or WiFi, they’d have the same speeds as before.

            As for a Wireguard connection tunnelling in from outside, it has so little overhead that it does not meaningfully impact speed or latency (I’d know, I use it every day).

            Also, you can set up the tunnel as a split tunnel. This means that

            • only traffic directed at your homeserver with the music server goes through the Wireguard tunnel while
            • any traffic directed at the open internet does not go through Wireguard, i.e. zero speed or latency penalty.

            Also attaching it to my router won’t work when I’m out travelling or away from home.

            I’m not sure what you mean by “it” here. Feel free to fill in the blank.

      • Yes, you can run a tailscale container or installed directly on your host machine and then run a vpn container like gluetun and input your mullvad credentials into the docker yaml. Then any containers you choose to run will be behind gluetun aka mullvad and all connect to your tailscale ip.

        • I’m not really much understanding what’s going on here. Your saying if I run this “gluetun” software and JUST have tailscale running on my device, all my traffic will still be routed thru mullvad. If so, will this greatly affect internet speeds? (Even the traffic not needed by tailscale is still routed thru)

          • Gluetun is a container to allow vpn connections. In docker any container you want to use the vpn connection you would put network_mode: service:gluetun and those containers would then use the vpn connection. With tailscale you would still access those containers through your tailscale ip address but they will be behind the gluetun vpn container. Tailscale doesnt act as a vpn as in masking your online activity it only secures your server from being accessed from outside of your tailnet. You can enable mullvad in tailscale but that provides mullvad exit nodes that any internet activity outside of your containers would be behind. Gluetun allows you to put your containers behind vpn as well. As far as speeds go, it might slow down abit but not much

          • No it has very little overhead. But you’ll need to choose between tailscale of mullvad on your phone since you can’t have two different VPN clients running at once on your phone.

            • Not true. If you enable mullvad in tailscale then when you have tailscale installed and enabled on your phone it allows you to route your phone through mullvad which has been enabled in the tailscale console. Its true about only one vpn connection, but with tailscale it provides mullvad connections in the app if you enable it in the tailscale console. Then you can access your containers remotely through tailscale and also have all your internet traffic go through mullvad all in the tailscale app

    • Add to this Linarr + IPTorrents and you are ready to go :)

      • Is linarr able to take a Spotify play list and get those songs?

        • 14 hours

          I tried that once and it downloaded a ton of shit I didn’t want and filled up my 8 TB of storage

        • Its lidarr not linarr, and yes. However lidarr is build to get entire releases at once (eg. Entire albums or single releases) and not individual songs.

  • Server (navidrome) + client (feishin, symphonium) + music (soulseek, bandcamp, ripping your old cds) + remote access (tailscale or something else if you’re savvy).

    • Alternative client: Tempus (formerly Tempo).

      If you’re even savvier: set up Wireguard for remote access instead of relying on Tailscale. (Possibly simplified by wg-easy or your router’s built-in Wireguard support.)

    • Absolutely Feishin for Navidrome behind tailscale. Its so good. Slskd for soulseek with Soularr to auto grab music is awesome also.

  • Download it via torrent, thats your best option. It takes time to build up a sizable catalog but it helps you can download entire acts discographies one fortuitous swoop here and there

    Paying is basically antithetical to privacy, I only do it for the essentials or what i cant otherwise obtain freely

    • 1 day

      I will usually buy vinyl or cds for artists that I listen to a lot. It has the additional benefit of giving you a hard copy of the data. But yeah, this is unfortunately the way.

      • Yeah, like support underdogs but be realistic, you cant pay for everything and everyone unless you’re unusally well-resourced so respect your own constraints where they exist.

        And thats just music, are you planning on remaining internally consistent and limiting the breadth of access you could otherwise have across all the modalities like TV shows, movies, books, courses, audiobooks, etc??

        Your consumption does not hurt them, the stuff you would pay for anyway just do that but i think i can live with myself for downloading Pink Flloyd’s discog or the complete cartoon series from childhood lol

        • For me its a spectrum, making my own judgment for each piece of media.

          Copyright laws in the US have changed a lot over the last century, largely due to regulatory capture. The older versions of copyright law are mostly around 14-28 years after creation and those seem fair to me. So I don’t feel bad about anything >30 years old.

          Another factor is the sliding spectrum between art as an altruistic creative experience versus art as a capitalist product created by gigantic corporations. Heavily monetized art tends to be stuff I enjoy less anyways so this kind of filters itself out. Its all formulaic and trend-chasing, largely the made by the same small group of people and rebranded with different faces. If I do ever want big-budget, mainstream content I don’t feel bad about not paying for it.

          Sometimes its about convenience. There are a handful of creators still on YouTube that I like, and one of these days I want to get around to setting up yt-dlp and adding their channels to my Jellyfin to get around all the terrible ads of the platform, but I’ll probably buy some merch or throw them some money on Patreon or whatever to try to compensate for it. I also prefer to buy CD’s and merch from bands at their live shows where a higher % of the proceeds goes to the artist.

        • 1 day

          For sure. Most of my money goes to local artists. If I want to support a music artist, I will usually see them in concert and/or purchase merch. But Ticketmaster is making that difficult these days. I had to have this discussion with my mom regarding amazon kindle.

          “AI companies are stealing everything anyway. Get your media while you can, because they don’t want it to exist anymore.”

  • I have a local music library.

    I once uploaded my entire connection of music (ripped from my own CDs or grabbed over the decades) to Google Music, but we know where that went. So I used Amazon Music for a few years, until the service went to shit.

    Unwanted tracks in my personal playlists; songs playing out of order; ads despite paying a subscription fee to listen to music I already own.

    The frustration with the entire copyright and, “rights holders” scene led me to turn away from buying anything but physical media at local music ships.

    I have never used the arr tools, but if I was starting from scratch, I probably would. For now, when I want a few new tracks, I use yt-dlp or fire up jackett and find it.

    Eta: frustrations

  • Op answer the following:

    How do you usually listen to music? Not “I put on my headphones, fire up Winamp and go” but “I use curated playlists from Spotify” or “i listen to whole albums on youtube”.

    What does private mean to you? What do you consider not private?

    • Although I would appreciate recommendation feed that’s private I know that’s impossible.

      I basically download songs anytime I get a recommendation or hear it somewhere. I usually listen for a while or add to a playlist. Very simple use case.

      Private means I know and things I choose know what I listen to and others don’t. I would also preferably like ownership of my music. I would consider not private something that uses my data for anything except necessities(no algo no selling)

      • I know this sounds stupid and pedantic, but what do you mean by ownership?

        Where or how do you download?

        E: recommendation isn’t off the table, you’ll just have to go about it in an unconventional way.

        • Ownership as in its a file on my device, no DRM or whatever shit people have on files nowadays.

          I download either bandcamp or sometimes from yt music.

          • Set up whatever arr piracy stack is going now and some kind of overlay network (vpn but not in the vernacular of “anonymizing proxy”) to play your files.

            Pick a player that you like and use it.

            Use a combination of rss and scripts to get recommendations.

            • Could you explain a little more on what you mean by rss and scripts to get recommendations. I’ve never really messed with something like that. Any recomemended feeds or sum to look at.

              • Everything you need already exists, it’s just plumbing.

                RSS takes in a website with articles or blog posts or whatever and makes them summarized so you can just look through the titles.

                Some kind of script to load some recent plays of yours on YouTube and scrape, compare and output the recommended panel would give you their recs.

                There are also very bad no good recommendation engines that don’t work. At least they were bad and didn’t work in the past.

        • I know this sounds stupid and pedantic, but what do you mean by ownership?

          Diff person here. Can’t speak for who you asked. Not stupid OR pedantic tho! For me, it means two things.

          One, that the music cannot be taken away from me against my will. So no DRM! No s/w that can reach into my device and remove things, how it was happening with DRM audiobooks. The music must be Plain Old Files. That I can copy and backup. No special s/w. Oldschool CDs were like that. DRM-ed music is not like that.

          Two, also means I have fairly paid the artist. Especially for smaller bands, or single individual musicians. If I like their shit enough to seek it out, I feel they deserve to get paid.

          It’s both of those at once that’s harder than it should be. Easy enuf to get one, or the other, alone.

          It’s not impossble tho. There are ways to have both, and I do it.

  • I’ve been enjoying using Finamp for my Jellyfin server, although you will need a proxy if you want to use it outside of your home network. I’m paying $7 a month (it used to be $5 😭) for a VPS that’s running Pangolin tunneled to my home server running Jellyfin. It’s basically my own private Spotify/Netflix/Audible. There are also free options like Nginx for the proxy.

    Pros:

    • Open source with desktop/web/android apps
    • Free/cheap once set up
    • Functions like major streaming services but doesn’t come with their bullshit
    • You have complete control over everything since it is self-hosted

    Cons:

    • Set up can be tough depending on your skill level
    • Requires your own home server PC
    • You must add all of your own content, be it through torrenting, ripping CDs, etc.
    • If you wanna save a little cash there’s a website called lowendbox that aggregates cheap vps deals. I try to keep mine under 10/11 bucks a year.

    • Dont really need a proxy for remote access. Tailscale is better and very secure and easy to setup.

      • Personally I prefer being able to just give someone a link without getting them to download and use a VPN. That’s why I went with Pangolin since it essentially functions as both.

  • I’m willing to pay just not on agregious amount of money.

    Me too. I wanna support the artists I like.

    I’ve used Bandcamp before. I was able to sign up anonymously and use a masked credit card to pay for music. Sure I could pirate it. But I feel like that’s a dick move, esp for smaller bands I like a lot.

    Playing music privately, that’s the trivial part! A million ways to do that, without sending any info to anyone, either at home or on the go.

  • The real problem is getting the music

    Is have a Spotify playlist of some 7000+ songs I want to have but finding each one individually is a nightmare. Are there ways to just put the list into some arr system and have it automatically torrented or pulled from Usenet or something like that?