Ok, the majority of complaints I have seen on here are from GPM refugees that believe there are 0 alternatives to listen to local files. In reality, there are so many alternatives that each offer a plethora of unique features that it's not a matter of what you're stuck with but which suits your tastes. So here are a few of my recommendations for a local music player. Keep in mind these are for android and I do not know if they are available on ios:

Rocket Music Player by JRT studio music players - This is by far my most used and most liked music player app. I've used it for the past 6 years exclusively and it is still my favourite. It offers many features like:


How To Download Music In Muzio Player


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It's free but you can pay $2 CAD to get rid of the nonintrusive banner ad that shows at the bottom of the UI. I've tried many players but the fact that it doesn't use the dogshit unskippable ads or ads that force you to wait 5 seconds to close is great, but tbh I just payed 2 bucks cause it's worth it.

It offers pretty much the same things as rocket player besides the live lists but it also has a proper queue function which rocket player lacks. Rocket player's queue works in reverse so it queues and plays songs that are most recently queued instead of the order they're queued in. Essentially this player has a play up next feature (what rocket player has) AND a real queue function

HOWEVER, there are the same unintrusive banner ads that show up only when looking at your song queue but every once in a while a full screen ad that cant be closed until 5 seconds pass (you know the ones) will pop up. It's kind of annoying and if you're a free user but you can pay $7 CAD to get rid of all ads and to get rid of ads, get crossfade, more themes (the themes offered in the free version are alright tbh but nowhere near the amount and quality rocket player offers for free), premium player and later pro features. The price is 5 bucks more than the other for premium but it's really up to personal preference which you wanna go for.

Anyways those were my 3 recommendations and I'd suggest to just try all 3 and see if any of them fit your needs. If not there are 100s of different music player apps out on the playstore to try, each with different features and UI's. So feel free to experiment and check them out, as these were just 3 I tried and liked (I am a bit biased towards rocket player though as it is the music player I used exclusively for the past 6 years).

Muzio Music Player is a very comprehensive music player for listening to your favorite music in a very special way. This tool has a very modern design and an advanced equalizer that gives you a customized way of listening to your songs. Download this app and listen to your songs like never before, thanks to its many features.

Additionally, Muzio Music Player has a very powerful equalizer with ten pre-set themes for listening to music. You can also use the five bandwidths, the bass booster, and all kinds of effects to create the perfect playback sound. With all these tools, you can customize and improve the sound of your favorite songs, making each one sound how you want it to.

Muzio Music Player gives all these features a large number of incredible functions, such as shaking the device to skip songs, adding a timer to turn off the player, creating automatic and intelligent playlists and a large number of special options for you to discover.

[Update:] So Android 11 dropped WMA built-in support. Now music apps have to support it directly, these include apps like VLC, Classic Media Player, and PowerAmp. I hope Muzio adds support as it's an attractive music player otherwise.

Experience Level: Advanced

Time Needed: Depends on if your music files are tagged or not (at least title and artist tags).

Programming Knowledge required: Python if you want to adapt it for other players

I like to extract playlist information (i.e. path and filenames) I've created on Android's builtin MP3-player, to copy it with the MP3 files to a bigger SDHC card. Playlist information is lost when doing this:

The reason for this issue is that Android mounts SD cards as /storage/UniqueId where UniqueId is a hex number (the serial number or CID of your SD card), e.g. A15F-1234.So your original SD card has a root path like/storage/A15F-1234/and when you buy a new SD card, its CID is different, so the root path changes, e.g. /storage/F987-5432/, hence the player is looking for the old path as stored in the playlist and don't find the files anymore!

and your playlists are all empty because every single entry still starts with the old path /storage/A15F-1234/..., and the player (e.g. Samsung Music) can't find them, because it doesn't look into the new path (/storage/F987-5432/...).

I found this interesting question, which explains that Android stores playlists in SqlLite databases, but unfortunately, on my Samsung phone I could not find the database file (although there is a folder Computer\GT-I8190\Phone\Android\data\com.google.android.music which should contain it, but no databases subdirectory and no database files).

N.B.: The smartphone is able to read and import *.m3u playlists (via the player's "Music Square" menu - context menu "Library update"), but cannot modify them (if you add titles, they will only be available in the smartphone, the *.m3u file isn't changed).

Or do you know if there is a tool available (for Android, or for Windows reading it from the mobile phone) converting the playlists into a compatible text format (like .m3u playlists)? 

 Phone Playlist -> M3U file


(Note: The other way round it is possible, as this forum postexplains). Here's an example of a M3U file, note that relative paths (like Sounds/Sample.mp3) are allowed as well (if the player supports them):

Update 2: After a long research, I found a music player "Muzio" in the Google PlayStore which can save internal playlists as text file (*.m3u) and load them later (the player uses Muzio/Playlist Backup directory on your internal storage).

If you want to copy the files in a playlist rather than the playlist itself, you can do that with Samsung Music player and the Tool "Total Commander" installed: Select the playlist (tip and press finger for a while to select), then select "Share" and in the share menu select "Total Commander". Choose the desired target folder. Then switch to Total Commander and you'll see the copy starting.

Update: Andrew has kindly provided an answer, which directly solves the issue. However, I keep this answer in case someone likes to develop a player on his/her own which will include a playlist import/export. Just use the link above which will take you to the source code.

The solution is to write an Android player app, which has access to the playlist database through the Android API. This app can read the properties of the playlist and save path, filename, title artist etc into a text file, preferrably M3U format.

This happened two times: yesterday at 11:45 am and today at 08:23 am. WLAN is deactivated, NFC is deactivated, Bluetooth is deactivated. The first time I have not even been at my desk. My boss was very shocked about the loud music (and kind of music :-)).

I am experiencing this exact problem after every time I have finished a listening session with Spotify. After some random time (usually 10mins - 8 hours) after I have stopped the music and left Spotify on background, it will suddenly start playing the same song I was last listening.

I'm still one of these guys who listens to MP3 music on my phone. I build playlists especially when I train in the gym or do other sport based activities. I found a way to take songs from Youtube videos and to transfer this directly to my Android phone. I wish to share this with you, it might help somebody.

Step 4: This can only be done with Google drive. You need to link your desktop to Google. Once you link your Google account, you can see in nautilus the your Google drive. Create a music folder in Google drive and transfer the music MP3 file in this folder.

Step 5: On your phone, Install an app called Drive Sync Pro. What it does is that is synchronizes your phone music folder with the Google drive music folder. When you add a new MP3 to your desktop Google drive, it will sync to your phone.

Many apps are designed to keep on playing your music after they've been minimised, allowing you to keep on listening while using your phone for other things. Each app is designed differently, for example the YouTube app will not allow you to play music without looking at the app.


If music is still playing after you've minimised the app it could be a design feature. Try returning to your music app and stopping the music manually or closing the app. It may take a few seconds for the app to close and your music to stop playing.


If your music continues playing, you can force the app to close. If the issue continues, we recommend contacting the app's developer. ff782bc1db

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