🆓 Free forever — and licensed to stay that way

Every tool here is open source; its license guarantees the right to use and redistribute it. This mirror is that promise in practice: each package's newest release that is at least 2 months old, served free forever — no account, no authentication.
Security and patch fixes are published immediately. Want every release within hours of upstream? That's the main repository at deb.griffo.io. 🚀

💬 Questions, issues or anything about this repo? Join our Discord community — the best place to get help and connect with other users.

🎵 Install Latest termusic on Ubuntu

Terminal music and podcast player written in Rust

⏳ Not in the free mirror yet — get it from deb.griffo.io (main)
Termusic is not in the free mirror yet. The free mirror currently serves Ghostty and Zed, with more on the way. Get Termusic from the main repository at deb.griffo.io — every release, within hours of upstream.
SourceVersion
deb.griffo.io (main)0.13.2 ✅
Official Ubuntu🚫 not packaged
← Back to home

What is termusic?

termusic is a comprehensive terminal music and podcast player written in Rust by tramhao. It allows you to listen to music and podcasts freely - both in terms of freedom and free of charge. With over 1.5k GitHub stars, it provides a full-featured music experience directly in your terminal with album covers, lyrics, and multiple audio backends.

🆓 Freedom Philosophy:
  • Freedom: No dependence on online service providers or complicated copyright restrictions
  • Free of charge: Download from YouTube, NetEase, Migu, and KuGou without monthly subscriptions
  • Your music: Play your local collection without platform limitations
🚀 Why Staying Current Matters: termusic is actively developed with frequent releases containing new features, performance improvements, and enhanced audio format support. The latest versions include better podcast support, improved album cover display, and enhanced streaming capabilities.

⚡ Key Features of termusic

🎨 Album Cover Display

Shows album covers directly in terminal using Kitty, iTerm2, Sixel protocols, or ueberzug. Visual music experience in text mode.

📻 Podcast Support

Full podcast player with RSS feed support, episode management, and streaming capabilities. Listen to your favorite shows in terminal.

🔊 Multiple Backends

Symphonia (Rust), GStreamer, and MPV backends for maximum format compatibility and performance options.

📥 Download Integration

Built-in support for yt-dlp and FFmpeg to download music from various online sources including YouTube.

🏷️ Tag Editor

Built-in metadata editor for organizing your music collection. Edit tags, album art, and file information directly.

🎼 Lyrics Support

Display synchronized lyrics with timestamp adjustment. Enhanced music experience with lyric viewing and editing.

🎵 Supported Audio Formats

  • Lossless: FLAC, AIFF, WAV
  • Compressed: MP3, M4A, Opus, Ogg Vorbis
  • Streaming: WebM, MKV (codec dependent)
  • Metadata: Full tag support for most formats
🆓 Free forever, patched immediately: Debian and Ubuntu freeze package versions when a release ships; this free mirror instead serves the newest release once it is at least 2 months old, with security fixes published immediately. Want every release within hours instead? That's the main repository at deb.griffo.io.

📦 Installation from deb-free.griffo.io

Step 1: Add Repository

sudo install -d -m 0755 /etc/apt/keyrings curl -fsSL https://deb-free.griffo.io/EA0F721D231FDD3A0A17B9AC7808B4DD62C41256.asc | sudo gpg --dearmor --yes -o /etc/apt/keyrings/deb-free.griffo.io.gpg echo "deb [signed-by=/etc/apt/keyrings/deb-free.griffo.io.gpg] https://deb-free.griffo.io/apt $(lsb_release -sc 2>/dev/null) main" | sudo tee /etc/apt/sources.list.d/deb-free.griffo.io.list > /dev/null sudo apt update
install -d -m 0755 /etc/apt/keyrings curl -fsSL https://deb-free.griffo.io/EA0F721D231FDD3A0A17B9AC7808B4DD62C41256.asc | gpg --dearmor --yes -o /etc/apt/keyrings/deb-free.griffo.io.gpg echo "deb [signed-by=/etc/apt/keyrings/deb-free.griffo.io.gpg] https://deb-free.griffo.io/apt $(lsb_release -sc 2>/dev/null) main" | tee /etc/apt/sources.list.d/deb-free.griffo.io.list > /dev/null apt update

Step 2: Install termusic

# Install latest termusic sudo apt install termusic # Verify installation termusic --version
# Install latest termusic apt install termusic # Verify installation termusic --version

🎯 Basic Usage Examples

Launch termusic:

# Start termusic termusic # Start with specific music directory termusic --music-dir ~/Music # Start server mode for remote control termusic-server

Essential controls:

# Playback Space - Play/Pause n - Next track p - Previous track r - Repeat mode s - Shuffle mode # Navigation j/k or ↑/↓ - Move up/down Enter - Select/Play Tab - Switch panels q - Quit # Volume +/- - Volume up/down m - Mute

🚀 Why Choose deb-free.griffo.io?

📊 Repository Comparison:
  • Official Ubuntu: Available in some versions but often outdated
  • Cargo Install: Requires Rust toolchain and complex dependencies
  • deb.griffo.io (main): Latest version with all dependencies

📦 Package Build Repository

The Ubuntu packages are automatically built and maintained in this GitHub repository:

🔗 Related Packages

Also available from deb.griffo.io:

🎯 Perfect for: Music enthusiasts who want comprehensive terminal audio experience, podcast listeners, developers who prefer terminal applications, and anyone seeking freedom from subscription-based music platforms.

💝 Support This Project

If this repository saves you time and effort, please consider supporting it!

⭐ Star on GitHub 🐦 Share on Twitter

📦 Recent releases at deb.griffo.io (main)

❓ Frequently asked questions

Is Termusic in the official Ubuntu repositories?

No — Termusic is not packaged in the official Ubuntu archives. This free mirror serves the newest Termusic release that is at least 2 months old; the main repository at deb.griffo.io serves every release within hours of upstream.

How do I install the latest Termusic on Ubuntu?

Add the deb-free.griffo.io repository once using the instructions above, then run: sudo apt install termusic. New releases arrive through the normal sudo apt upgrade.

Are the packages signed and how are they built?

Every package is signed with the repository's GPG key (EA0F721D231FDD3A0A17B9AC7808B4DD62C41256) and built from upstream releases in public GitHub packaging repositories that anyone can inspect.

Which Ubuntu releases are supported?

Ubuntu 22.04 Jammy, 24.04 Noble, 25.10 Questing and 26.04 Resolute.