Linux & DevOps

How to Organize and Enjoy Your Music Library with Strawberry on Linux

2026-05-01 01:45:47

Introduction

If you have a growing collection of digital music, keeping it organized and accessible can be a challenge. Strawberry is a powerful music player and manager for Linux that goes beyond simple playback. It offers tools to edit tags, manage file structures, create intelligent playlists, and even fetch album art and lyrics. This guide will walk you through setting up Strawberry, adding your music, cleaning up metadata, and automating organization so you can spend less time managing files and more time listening.

How to Organize and Enjoy Your Music Library with Strawberry on Linux

What You Need

Step 1: Install Strawberry

First, get Strawberry on your system. Open a terminal and use your package manager:

If your distribution doesn't have it in the repositories, you can download an AppImage from the official website or use Flatpak/Snap.

Step 2: Add Music to Strawberry's Library

Launch Strawberry. The first time you run it, you'll be prompted to add folders. Click Add and navigate to the directory containing your music. Strawberry will scan and import all audio files it finds. You can add multiple folders (e.g., one for MP3s, one for FLACs). After scanning, your collection appears in the Library view.

Step 3: Organize and Clean Up Metadata Tags

Messy tags (wrong artist, album, genre) make a library hard to browse. Strawberry lets you edit tags in bulk or individually.

  1. Select one or many tracks (hold Ctrl or Shift).
  2. Right-click and choose Edit Tags or press F2.
  3. Change fields such as Artist, Album, Title, Year, Genre, etc.
  4. Use Guess Tags from Filename if your files have a consistent naming pattern (e.g., Artist - Album - 01 - Song.mp3). Strawberry will parse the structure and auto-fill tags.
  5. Click Save to write the changes to the metadata.

For more advanced needs, go to Tools → Tag Editor or install the optional Picard plugin for MusicBrainz integration.

Step 4: Organize Your Music Files on Disk

Strawberry can rename and move your actual music files to a folder structure you define.

  1. Go to Settings → Collections → Organise files.
  2. Create a pattern, e.g., %artist%/%album%/%track% - %title%. This will create folders like Beatles/Abbey Road/01 - Come Together.mp3.
  3. Click Organise. Strawberry shows a preview; confirm to apply.
  4. Warning: This moves files on disk, so ensure your source folder is correct. Back up first if needed.

Step 5: Create Smart Playlists

Smart playlists automatically update based on criteria. For example, a playlist that always contains your most-played songs from the 1980s.

  1. In the Playlists pane, right-click and select New Smart Playlist.
  2. Add rules: e.g., Genre is Rock AND Play count > 10.
  3. Set sorting order (random, by rating, etc.) and limit the number of tracks.
  4. Give it a name and save. The playlist updates automatically as your library changes.

Step 6: Fetch Metadata and Album Artwork

Strawberry can download missing album art and lyrics from online sources.

Step 7: Play and Enjoy

Now your library is organized, tags are clean, and smart playlists are ready. Use Strawberry's player controls, queue, or sort by any column. The Album Cover view makes browsing visual. You can also use the built-in Equalizer or connect to a remote stream. Strawberry supports output to multiple audio devices and can write replay gain tags for consistent volume.

Tips for a Smooth Experience

By following these steps, you'll transform your scattered music files into a curated, well‑organized collection that Strawberry makes a pleasure to browse and play.

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