sillyhatsonly

joined 1 year ago
[–] [email protected] 9 points 4 weeks ago

Like you I try to support artists by purchasing physical media or releases on Bandcamp. Outside of that I get my music on Soulseek, through torrents, Usenet, and occasionally XDCC. I don’t need lossless files and even if I download FLACs I transcode them to 320kbps MP3 before they go on my iPod anyway. The harder it becomes to acquire music legally the less bad I feel about downloading with abandon.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 month ago

Awesome! If you do I'd love to hear how it goes. I'm sure I'm not the only person trying this but I haven't found much online from other users yet.

 

This is my guide for generating playlists for your local music library using ListenBrainz and the troi recommendation engine. troi is still being developed and the official documentation isn't great so I figured documenting my process might help others who are interested. I've tried this both with local folders on my Debian server and with my Navidrome library from my Macbook so I will do my best to explain both.

There are a few requirements

  1. Your music must be tagged with MusicBrainz. I use beets for this but you can also use the MusicBrainz desktop client.
  2. You need a ListenBrainz account. Data can be imported from Last.fm or Libre.fm if you have it.

Install troi

Install troi and nmslib with pip

pip install troi
pip install nmslib-metabrainz

If you're on a managed python install use pipx and add the virtual environment to your PATH (don't forget to reload)

pipx install troi
pipx inject troi nmslib-metabrainz
export PATH="$PATH":"$HOME/.local/bin"
source ~/.zshrc

Configure troi

Create a folder for your troi configuration files. I used ~/.config/troi. Create a file config.py in your configuration folder using the example format below. Edit DATABASE_FILE and MUSIC_DIRECTORIES to match your setup.

If you're using a Subsonic library (like Navidrome) you can fill in SUBSONIC_HOST with your instance url, SUBSONIC_USER and SUBSONIC_PASSWORD with your login and SUBSONIC_PORT with 443 (this is the only port that I could get to work with my docker setup)

# Where to find the database file
# If path is passed with -d flag, this list is ignored.
DATABASE_FILE = "/users/sillyhatsonly/.config/troi/troi-db.db"

# To connect to a Subsonic API
SUBSONIC_HOST = "https://music.myserver.dev"  # include http:// or https://
SUBSONIC_USER = "admin"
SUBSONIC_PASSWORD = "thisisnotmypassword"
SUBSONIC_PORT = 443

# List of music directories to scan by default
# If paths are passed to scan command, this list is ignored.
# Invalid directories are skipped.
MUSIC_DIRECTORIES = [
    'My/Music/Directory 1',
    'My/Music/Directory 2',
]

Create your music database

Now create the database, scan the local directories specified in config.py and pull ListenBrainz tag/popularity metadata for all files. If you're using a Subsonic library run troi db subsonic instead of troi db scan

# create database
troi db create
# scan music directories
troi db scan
# pull music metadata
troi db metadata

Generate playlists

Generate playlists for your local library using ListenBrainz Radio Local. Specify a mode which sets how closely the resulting playlist will meet the prompt (easy/medium/hard from closest to furthest) and an entity reference either artist or tag. More details in the docs: LB Prompt Radio Reference

# tracks by Thou and similar artists
troi lb-radio easy 'artist:(thou)' -m <playlist-name>.m3u

# tracks tagged 'jazz' and tracks tagged 'hip-hop'
troi lb-radio medium 'tag:(jazz)::or tag:(hip-hop)'

# tracks tagged both 'indie rock' and 'experimental'
troi lb-radio medium 'tag:(indie rock, experimental)'

Another option is to generate weekly recommendations playlists for your ListenBrainz account

# -m flag saves to the specified m3u playlist
troi weekly-jams <username> -m <playlist-name>.m3u

# -u flag uploads the playlist via Subsonic API
troi weekly-jams <username> -u

Automate weekly playlists

You can automate weekly playlists with a script. I wrote a script that scans my music directory, removes missing files, generates a playlist, and saves it locally as an m3u

#!/bin/sh

# scan music directory and pull metadata using the database in our troi config folder
troi db scan 'My/Music/Directory 1' -q -d '/users/sillyhatsonly/.config/troi/troi-db.db'
troi db metadata 'My/Music/Directory 1' -q -d '/users/sillyhatsonly/.config/troi/troi-db.db'
# clean up the database and remove any missing files
troi db cleanup --remove -q -d '/users/sillyhatsonly/.config/troi/troi-db.db'
# generate weekly playlist and save locally to m3u
troi weekly-jams <username> -d '/users/sillyhatsonly/.config/troi/troi-db.db' -y -q -m /users/sillyhatsonly/music/playlists/weekly-$(date +%Y%m%d).m3u

Then set it up to run weekly as a cron job.


That's all I've done so far. Hopefully this makes sense. I welcome comments or questions. If anyone else has been using troi with their local music libraries I'd love to hear about your experience. Playlist generation was the one feature I really missed when I stopped using streaming platforms so I'm excited about this tool!

[–] [email protected] 4 points 1 month ago

I absolutely don’t need (nor can I afford) another QAZ but this is just too good and I must have it 🤤

[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 month ago

Streaming my own music was the reason I got into self-hosting in the first place and I’ve been satisfied with Navidrome for over a year now. My preference is to stream via an app on my phone but I’ve made accounts for a couple friends and they stream happily on multiple devices using the browser interface.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 2 months ago (1 children)

As stated, my reason is that I was paying Spotify more money for less music and I was unhappy with that. You pointed out yourself that musicians barely get by in the streaming era so I would rather support them on Bandcamp (I know it has it’s own issues) or buying physical media whenever possible rather than pirating. Streaming platforms may make music you want to listen to seemingly affordable and accessible but that’s not the case for everyone. This is my personal experience.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 2 months ago (3 children)

it’s easier to just sub to something like Apple Music… literally $110/yr for all the music that exists.

As others have stated, not all music exists on every streaming platform. That alone is enough of a reason for me. I recently canceled my longtime Spotify subscription because the price kept increasing while my library kept decreasing. I actually don’t pirate music when I can help it because I’d rather support artists on Bandcamp or purchasing physical media directly. If I can’t do that then I head to Soulseek!

[–] [email protected] 0 points 3 months ago

This. This is a good list.

[–] [email protected] 0 points 3 months ago

Violet Cold goes so hard. What's your favorite album?

[–] [email protected] 0 points 3 months ago

I've never gotten too deep into symphonic metal but Blackwater Park is a masterpiece

[–] [email protected] 0 points 3 months ago (1 children)

Many of these bands are new to me so I'm making my way down your list and Murmuüre is blowing my mind

[–] [email protected] 0 points 3 months ago

I saw them live last month and Morning Star was a transcendent experience!!!

[–] [email protected] 0 points 3 months ago* (last edited 3 months ago) (4 children)

Hard to narrow down favorites because my feelings change often, but these 5 have been in rotation most often lately (in no particular order)

And I'll say that I don't necessarily think these are the best albums ever... I don't think I could ever make up my mind about that! Looking forward to seeing everyone else's picks.

 

I'm trying to reign in my iOS camera roll and I figured it would be easier on desktop. Turns out the Photos app suuuuuuucks. All I want is to categorize photos by tag or folder and then remove them from the main view. Albums are nice in theory but they're an extra click/tap away from the home screen and don't hide photos from the camera roll. Is there a better way to do this?

 

cross-posted from: https://lemmy.blahaj.zone/post/1312795

[Image description: A screenshot of the lemmy.blahaj.zone front page with a custom userstyle applied. The userstyle features a dark gray background with medium gray text and brightly-colored accents of purple, pink, orange, and cyan. The right sidebar cards are a light shade of gray with lighter gray text, pink buttons, and orange links]

A few weeks ago I decided to try my hand at bringing my favorite theme to Lemmy and this userscript was born. It's still in the early stages so there are some wrinkles to iron out, but I just pushed a big update with better contrast, style fixes, and streamlined code.

I've received several requests to turn it into a native Lemmy theme but have no idea how to do that. If anyone has any tips on theming, interest in collaborating, or a Lemmy instance where I could test a native theme, hit me up! You can find all the code here on Codeberg.

0
submitted 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
 

cross-posted from: https://lemmy.blahaj.zone/post/1312795

[Image description: A screenshot of the lemmy.blahaj.zone front page with a custom userstyle applied. The userstyle features a dark gray background with medium gray text and brightly-colored accents of purple, pink, orange, and cyan. The right sidebar cards are a light shade of gray with lighter gray text, pink buttons, and orange links]

A few weeks ago I decided to try my hand at bringing my favorite theme to Lemmy and this userscript was born. It's still in the early stages so there are some wrinkles to iron out, but I just pushed a big update with better contrast, style fixes, and streamlined code.

I've received several requests to turn it into a native Lemmy theme but have no idea how to do that. If anyone has any tips on theming, interest in collaborating, or a Lemmy instance where I could test a native theme, hit me up! You can find all the code here on Codeberg.

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