 Hi, I'm Denshi and I have a folder on my computer called Music on my desktop that has a bunch of folders with albums of various artists. And I also have a program on my computer called CMUS or the C Music Player. So everyone that in my terminal, as you can see, it brings up an interface where I can organize, play and do a bunch of cool things with all the songs on my computer. Now you can install this software quite easily, it's probably in your repositories just as CMUS, so you can do pacman-s CMUS or apt install CMUS, whichever distribution of Linux are on. But once you're in here, you've probably been in this situation before where you see nothing and you want to do something to add songs. And in CMUS, you do colon, like you would do in Vim or you do a colon to run a command, add and then name your folder, so in this case it's called Music in the directory I'm currently in, which is my desktop, this CMUSE instance is running off my desktop. I'm going to press Enter. And here we are, we've already got a bunch of songs. We can use the arrow keys up and down to select a specific artist. And then we can press Tab to switch to the actual individual songs. So if I want Billy Joel, I want to select one of the songs that are these albums, I can press Tab and go through these and say I want to play James. And as you can see, it's playing over here, you're not going to be able to hear that copyright reasons. But if you press C, then that stops playing. So C is your pause and unpause buttons and press it again and it pauses. So if you press the minus button on your keyboard or the plus button on your keyboard, see the volume goes up and down, so that's your volume control. And the left and right arrows are for skipping. So go forward over here, it brings me forward, then it goes backwards, see the number over here goes up and goes down. So that's our little seek feature. Now we want to figure out how to play individual albums. So I'm going to press Tab, back to the artist selection, press Space. And now we have all the individual albums of the artist. So press Space on the artist and outcome of the actual albums they've made. So there's a couple of other features to take a look at Simus, besides this, this is just menu number one. It has seven menus. So menu number two is all of the songs that you have on your system. So all the songs that you've scanned and added into Simus are going to be available here, sorted normally by their album and number and stuff. But sometimes by alphabet or other things, you can change what they're sorted by. Then you can press three. And here we have the playlist menu, but there's nothing here. How do we add things to the playlist? Well if you go back to either this menu or this menu, let's say I want to add poker. So I'm going to press Y on my keyboard to add that to my playlist. I want to add Rokaria and I want to add Shangri-La, I want to add Sweet Talking Woman, Jungle and Big Wheels, Mr. Blue Sky. I also want to go up here to Billy Joel and add Piano Man, Captain Jack and every time you press Y it skips you to the next song, so that's how you know you did it right. James, Miami, 2017 and Vietnam. I want to add all those songs and now if I go to three on my playlist you'll see they're all there in the order that I've added them in. So look at that. And a playlist in Seamuse. There's also a couple of more things you can do. Press four. You have a cue. So this is a cue, so not a playlist that remains consistent throughout your use to Seamuse. So this is just a thing you can throw together now. And to add things to the cue you press E. So I'm going to say goodbye to Hollywood, angry young man, I don't know, she's always a woman then back to Electric Light Orchestra, poker again, actually no, yeah poker, Slytherin Thing, Believe Me Now, all this stuff. Go back to RQ and as you can see they're all on RQ. Once you've skipped to the end as you can see you reach the songs in your cue right here. So at the moment it's playing the song that just disappeared, say goodbye to Hollywood, the first one we added to our cue. Then once it's done with this song or you skip this song you can go directly to angry young man and all these other songs that we've added. Now menu number five, this is relatively simple. It's just a file browser. So we can go once again, this is our desktop, go to music, this is the folder we've added with all the songs that we've added. So this is just a basic file browser that you can use to browse for songs and play them, nothing complex here, moving on. This menu is your library filter. So these are essentially filters you can apply, which are just commands and CMUs that is F set 90s, it's called, which is just setting the date to anything after 1919 before 2000. And all these would do would limit your music selection to whatever syntax you add, I'm not really going to get into that right now because it's quite a complex and powerful feature. But anyway, moving on to section seven, which is just key buying customizations, so you can go here and customize all the key binds for various features. And there's a lot of things that aren't set like all of these things, which aren't currently set. So you can go through all of these and set all these key binds if you really want to. But anyway, this was the C music player. I find that it's a very, very nice program to use and it just looks really, really good in my opinion. And it's great to pair with a program named Kava, which is just a little visualizer here. So if you start playing a song, like living thing, you'll see that it visualizes the song and it looks quite nice. Anyway, I hope you enjoyed this video. I was Denshi. Goodbye.