Raspberry Pi as music player

Tinker. Listen. Enjoy.

About the Raspberry Pi

The Raspberry Pi shouldn't need any kind of presentation, being probably the most popular device among DIYers since it landed on the market in the February of 2012.

If you still don't know it, it is a wonderful low cost, credit-card sized computer that fits in the palm of your hand, yet packs enough power to run a lot of applications.

Among all its possible uses, we love one in particular:
listening to music.

Why use the Rpi for playing music?

Because it will change the way you listened to music until now.

  • It's inexpensive

    The Raspberry Pi 2 Model B is the second generation Raspberry Pi. It replaced the original Raspberry Pi 1 Model B+ in February 2015. The board is six times faster than the previous model but it's selling for the same price – $35.

  • It's small

    Its credit-card size that fits in the palm of your hand allows you to hide it wherever you want, making it a very discrete presence in your listening room. There are also lots of enclosures available on the market, of you can build a custom one if you like DIY.

  • It's fanless

    Remember those hot and noisy music servers with fans constantly running and collecting dust inside them?
    That annoying background noise while you were trying to enjoy the subtle nuances of your favorite album?
    Luckly those times are finally gone.

  • It's green

    It's power consumption usually stays around 3-4 Watts under heavy load, something ridiculously low when compared to a common x86_64 PC powered by external PSU. If ecology matters to you while listening to good music, this is the way to go.

  • It's headless

    Once connected to your local network (via Ethernet or WiFi), the Raspberry Pi can be used like a headless server which does not need a monitor or a keyboard connected to it. Thus it can be remotely controllable from a smartphone, a tablet or a notebook.

So how do I use it?

You will need a software which has to be easy to install and use, and which allows you to play music from the Raspberry Pi and control the playback and the system configuration from remote.

We made it for you.

 

RuneAudio is a free and open source software that turns your Raspberry Pi into an Hi-Fi music player. It will make it perform as an high fidelity digital source.

It's a system based on a custom-built Linux distribution, which has been specifically tailored around the scope of high quality music playback. Unused aspects of the typical operating system have been stripped away. Many system parameters have been tweaked to optimize the performance and get the best results possible from the hardware.

MP3 Flac DLNA UPnP AirPlay Spotify Dirble Jamendo

Easy to use, platform independent

Such a system should also be easy to use for everyone.
RuneAudio offers a handy web interface which lets users control the playback and configure the system settings, with no need to have previous experience with Linux nor use the command line. The web interface is platform agnostic and responsive (it adapts to screen size), which makes it accessible from every kind of device (desktop computers, notebooks, tablets and smartphones) with a modern web browser installed.

RuneUI screenshot

Easy to install

Installing RuneAudio on Raspberry Pi is as easy as writing a disk image file (.img) to a SD card and then plug it into its card reader slot. It will only take some minutes and requires no particular skills.

Quick start guide

SD card

Open Source and community driven

RuneAudio is open source and collaborative, and many coders, makers and music lovers have been involved in its development. A project like this could not evolve as well as it does without passionate and dedicated contributors.

Download RuneAudio for Raspberry Pi

You can download RuneAudio for free from the download page of the official website.

Hardware

Some suggestions on the hardware that you will need to get the best sound quality results from your Raspberry Pi. I2S DACs are a great option because they add a great sound quality with the lowest possible distortion to your Raspberry Pi.
Items are presented in random order.

HiFiBerry DAC+

HiFimeDIY ES9023 I2S DAC

I2S DAC (Rpi B)

HiFiBerry DAC+

Durio Sound

I2S DAC (Rpi B/B+)

HiFiBerry DAC+

Mamboberry Hi-Fi DAC+

I2S DAC (Rpi A+/B+/2)

HiFiBerry DAC+

G2Labs BerryNOS mini

I2S DAC (Rpi A/B)

HiFiBerry DAC+

IQaudIO Pi-AMP+

I2S soundcard (Rpi A+/B+/2)

HiFiBerry DAC+

RaspyPlay4

I2S DAC (Rpi A+/B+/2)

HiFiBerry DAC+

HiFiBerry DAC+

I2S DAC (Rpi A+/B+/2)

HiFiBerry DAC+

Cirrus Logic Audio Card

I2S soundcard (Rpi A+/B+/2)

HiFiBerry DAC+

HiFiBerry Amp+

I2S soundcard (Rpi A+/B+/2)

HiFiBerry DAC+

IQaudIO DAC+

I2S DAC (Rpi A+/B+/2)

HiFiBerry DAC+

HiFiBerry Digi+

I2S S/PDIF output (Rpi A+/B+/2)

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