Quitting Spotify for Navidrome
Quitting Spotify for Navidrome
Listen to music like it’s 2005 : Luke Cyca Dot Calm

I rediscovered the joy of my own music collection by quitting Spotify and switching to self-hosted Navidrome.
Quitting Spotify for Navidrome
Listen to music like it’s 2005 : Luke Cyca Dot Calm

I rediscovered the joy of my own music collection by quitting Spotify and switching to self-hosted Navidrome.
I chose Navidrome for my music collection. I basically use it when I'm outside working around the property. Put on my raggedy ass pair of Beats, I found in the thrift store for $5...had to do some repairs but they work, on a defunct old phone just for the wifi access. When I'm inside tho, I use Music Bee. Navadrome has everything I need, tho I am still searching for a mobile app that operates like I want it too. The app I'm currently using, Agin Music, is good, but there are a couple places in the operation flow that won't let me backtrack to the previous page I was viewing. I'll keep testing until I find one.
Android or iOS?
On android I found symphonium to be a great app to use with my navidrome server. On iOS, play:sub was the best experience I found
Second for Symphonium. Hands-down best *sonic client.
Symfonium is great, and in its current state, probably the best Subsonic client for android. (Tempus is good enough for me though.) But best of luck if you ever have a nontrivial issue and ask the dev for help. That's one abrasive mf. (Just take a look here. It's hard to find anyone so full of themselves.)
That said, if it works for your needs, it's a great app. I won't judge anyone for using it, but I'm someone who can't and won't separate the art from its artist. If that applies to you, you've been warned.
On iOS, ply:sub was the best experience I found
I'll check out ply:sub. Thank you for the recommendation.
Symphonium requires google play, right?
Arpeggi on iOS is the best I’ve found. Available via TestFlight invite only. I plan to switch to Android in the next year, so I’m always interested to hear what clients people like over there too.
Tempo, Subtracks or Ultrasonic. All 3 on F-droid. You might find what you need there
On Android, you should try out Tempus.
DSub2000 is also fairly nice for Android.
I have no idea about Navidrome, but I completely agree with the gist of this article. Actively choose the music you listen to. When the music you've chosen has run out, if you're not motivated to make another choice, let the music stop and enjoy quiet for a while.
I migrated from Apple Music to Qobuz as part of my dropping of US services.
It’s very much playlist and release based which is great for both curation and discovery. At least I’ve found myself discovering more music from their playlists, which are often curated by musicians.
They do have a “for you” list but for whatever reason only show it on mobile, and it’s not my favourite algorithm.
I used to be a very engaged music listener. I loved it and would put effort into listening to albums start to finish. When Spotify took over, my habits changed and now I don’t really actively follow music or pay much attention to what I’m listening to.
Interesting. I've always been a full-album kind of listener, never do I not listen to a full album if I'm listening to music. Even after having been on Spotify for a decade or so. I wonder what changed for you but not for me.
I think that’s also a setting for Spotify tho.
How many people do it
Really feeling this, the first paragraph could've written by me and I switched to Navidrome as well some months ago.
Btw, your RSS feed seems to be broken:
https://lukecyca.com/lukecyca.xml
XML Parsing Error: not well-formed Location: https://lukecyca.com/lukecyca.xml Line Number 46, Column 50:
<title>
Macintosh Classic II Refurbishment & PiSCSI Enclosure</title>
-------------------------------------------------^Presumably, that ampersand needs to be replaced with &...
Thanks for your comments! I've fixed the RSS file now I think.
Quickly and effortlessly get some music playing that can act as a backdrop for your real activity such as working, driving, cooking, hosting friends, etc. Keep it rolling indefinitely.
“Discover” new music by statistical means based on your average tastes.
This is the main thing I want out of music software tbh.
I recently set up a Navidrome/Lidarr setup and I'm beyond thrilled. Works great. I also recommend Symfonium app on android, it's paid, but it's worth it for the quality. On desktop, I'm trying out strawberry, but I find it a bit clunky, so I will probably try out other players. Use beet to download and ebmbed lyrics, and my music has never been better. I immediately ditched Spotify and haven't looked back.
Check Feishin. It works great with both Jellyfin and Navidrome.
I also just started the process of migrating to a self hosted music server. I'm using navidrome, but a big feature I want is being able to easily add custom tags to songs that I can later use to search and filter for what I want. Navidrome will only open your library in read-only, which is a smart security measure, but means it cant support this. I'm going to try Koel next and see how that goes.
Navidrome will only open your library in read-only
Are you sure that's not just the default in the example docker-compose.yml? If there isn't some additional handling, you can just remove the ":ro" from:
volumes:
- "/path/to/your/music/folder:/music:ro"
Its a design choice of Navidrome: https://www.navidrome.org/docs/faq/#-how-can-i-edit-my-music-metadata-id3-tags-how-can-i-renamemove-my-files
I know there is a lot about Plex to hate, but I am always grateful for Plexamp. It requires a Plex pass, but it’s worth it for Plexamp alone imo.
Jellyfin doesn't have something comparable in the dedicated (OSS) world, but Symfonium takes a Jellyfin connection and is hands down the single best music player I have ever encountered on any platform.
I mean, if you're paying for something anyway, Navidrome + Symfonium is (to me) a better option.
Too bad it's unusable if you're like me and have huge playlists that you want to offline for shuffling due to spending long stretches of time without an Internet connection.
When I asked about this limitation, I was told that it was stupid to have such big playlists and needing to offline them because nobody is without Internet for long enough times for it to matter.
Great response from the developers that.
Yeah...all these companies try to sell you a solution to your problems...but it always involves giving them control over how you use your own products.
syncthing+musicolet(android) and cmus(linux) works lile a charm
I started with Navidrome, then looked at the disk space occupied by my library and it occured to me that 1TB MicroSD cards are a thing now, and I can listen to all my library offline.
A few years ago, I set up a home-server with music and some pictures on there, and recently I noticed that my storage disk was getting full. Then I saw that the disk only had 16 GB and wondered, where the hell I got that small of a disk from.
So, I go to plug in a bigger disk and can't even find the original disk at first. Turns out my whole storage capacity was one of these bad boys:
And yeah, I've got about 1800 songs, clocking in at 5.8 GB, so even that tiny storage would easily be enough for a much larger collection.
And I do also have them replicated on my phone, for listening on the go. (Don't even need an SD card in my case.)
Haha, server grade hardware. Impressive, actually, that it survived so many years. I have a similar one in my car and it's 10+ years old and works okay, but another one that's permanently sticked in my server with an emergency boot image died when it was needed the most.
I am actually in the process of setting up my own navidrome server on my proxmox host running on my old desktop hardware.
I was initially inspired by the following post and am very excited to get rid of Spotify.
I've been using Navidrome for a few months now. I also use Amplify on my iphone to stream using native controls which I find very useful.
Neat! As someone who never had that much luck with Spotify's recommendations, this is part of what worked for me.
When I want a specific mood or even artist for music I own, I use navidrome.
To expand that collection I use bandcamp (and bandcamp Fridays).
To discover new stuff, I rely on recommendations from friends or go wide with sources like NTS radio or similar.