LastGenre Plugin#
The lastgenre plugin fetches tags from Last.fm and assigns them as genres
to your albums and items.
Installation#
To use the lastgenre plugin, first enable it in your configuration (see
Using Plugins). Then, install beets with lastgenre extra
pip install "beets[lastgenre]"
Usage#
The plugin chooses genres based on a whitelist, meaning that only certain tags
can be considered genres. This way, tags like "my favorite music" or "seen live"
won't be considered genres. The plugin ships with a fairly extensive internal
whitelist, but you can set your own in the config file using the whitelist
configuration value or forgo a whitelist altogether by setting the option to
no.
The genre list file should contain one genre per line. Blank lines are ignored. For the curious, the default genre list is generated by a script that scrapes Wikipedia.
Canonicalization#
The plugin can also canonicalize genres, meaning that more obscure genres can be turned into coarser-grained ones that are present in the whitelist. This works using a tree of nested genre names, represented using YAML, where the leaves of the tree represent the most specific genres.
The most common way to use this would be with a custom whitelist containing only a desired subset of genres. Consider for a example this minimal whitelist:
rock
heavy metal
pop
together with the default genre tree. Then an item that has its genre specified as viking metal would actually be tagged as heavy metal because neither viking metal nor its parent black metal are in the whitelist. It always tries to use the most specific genre that's available in the whitelist.
The relevant subtree path in the default tree looks like this:
- rock:
- heavy metal:
- black metal:
- viking metal
Considering that, it's not very useful to use the default whitelist (which contains about any genre contained in the tree) with canonicalization because nothing would ever be matched to a more generic node since all the specific subgenres are in the whitelist to begin with.
Genre Source#
When looking up genres for albums or individual tracks, you can choose whether to use Last.fm tags on the album, the artist, or the track. For example, you might want all the albums for a certain artist to carry the same genre. The default is "album". When set to "track", the plugin will fetch both album-level and track-level genres for your music when importing albums.
Multiple Genres#
By default, the plugin chooses the most popular tag on Last.fm as a genre. If
you prefer to use a list of popular genre tags, you can increase the number of
the count config option.
Lists of up to count genres will be stored in the genres field as a list
and written to your media files as separate genre tags.
Last.fm provides a popularity factor, a.k.a. weight, for each tag ranging
from 100 for the most popular tag down to 0 for the least popular. The plugin
uses this weight to discard unpopular tags. The default is to ignore tags with a
weight less then 10. You can change this by setting the min_weight config
option.
Specific vs. Popular Genres#
By default, the plugin sorts genres by popularity. However, you can use the
prefer_specific option to override this behavior and instead sort genres by
specificity, as determined by your whitelist and canonicalization tree.
For instance, say you have both folk and americana in your whitelist and
canonicalization tree and americana is a leaf within folk. If Last.fm
returns both of those tags, lastgenre is going to use the most popular, which is
often the most generic (in this case folk). By setting prefer_specific
to true, lastgenre would use americana instead.
Configuration#
To configure the plugin, make a lastgenre: section in your configuration
file. The available options are:
auto: Fetch genres automatically during import. Default:
yes.canonical: Use a canonicalization tree. Setting this to
yeswill use a built-in tree. You can also set it to a path, like thewhitelistconfig value, to use your own tree. Default:no(disabled).cleanup_existing: This option only takes effect with
force: no, Setting this toyeswill result in cleanup of existing genres. That includes canonicalization and whitelisting, if enabled. If no matching genre can be determined, thefallbackis used instead. Default:no(disabled).count: Number of genres to fetch. Default: 1
fallback: A string to use as a fallback genre when no genre is found
orthe original genre is not desired to be kept (keep_existing: no). You can use the empty string''to reset the genre. Default: None.force: By default, lastgenre will fetch new genres for empty tags only, enable this option to always try to fetch new last.fm genres. Enable the
keep_existingoption to combine existing and new genres. (see Handling pre-populated tags). Default:no.keep_existing: This option alters the
forcebehavior. If bothforceandkeep_existingare enabled, existing genres are combined with new ones. Depending on thewhitelistsetting, existing and new genres are filtered accordingly. To ensure only fresh last.fm genres, disable this option. (see Handling pre-populated tags) Default:no.min_weight: Minimum popularity factor below which genres are discarded. Default: 10.
prefer_specific: Sort genres by the most to least specific, rather than most to least popular. Note that this option requires a
canonicaltree, and if not configured it will automatically enable and use the built-in tree. Default:no.source: Which entity to look up in Last.fm. Can be either
artist,albumortrack. Default:album.whitelist: The filename of a custom genre list,
yesto use the internal whitelist, ornoto consider all genres valid. Default:yes.title_case: Convert the new tags to TitleCase before saving. Default:
yes.
Running Manually#
In addition to running automatically on import, the plugin can also be run
manually from the command line. Use the command beet lastgenre [QUERY] to
fetch genres for albums or items matching a certain query.
By default, beet lastgenre matches albums. To match individual tracks or
singletons, use the -A switch: beet lastgenre -A [QUERY].
To preview the changes that would be made without applying them, use the -p
or --pretend flag. This shows which genres would be set but does not write
or store any changes.
To disable automatic genre fetching on import, set the auto config option to
false.
Tuning Logs#
To enable tuning logs, run beet -vvv lastgenre ... or beet -vvv import
.... This enables additional messages at the DEBUG log level, showing for
example what data was received from last.fm at each stage of genre fetching
(artist, album, and track levels) before any canonicalization or whitelist
filtering is applied. Tuning logs are useful for adjusting the plugin’s settings
and understanding its behavior, though they can be quite verbose.