Clementine Remote Mac

When it comes to a Mac music player, users are often confused. That's because, for some reason, most players look like iTunes but with a broader functionality and the absence of iTunes store. We need an iTunes alternative because we want to listen to audio formats not supported by it.
Today, I'm comparing to prominent audio players for Mac – VOX Music Player and Clementine according to their functionality, compatibility, format support, interface and additional features.

Clementine is a free, open source, cross-platform music player and library organizer inspired by Amarok (another powerful multi-platform music player). It was released for the first time in 2010 and the authors kept adding new features (see below) and improved the overall functionality. The most popular Mac alternative is foobar2000, which is free. If that doesn't suit you, our users have ranked more than 100 alternatives to Clementine and loads of them are available for Mac so hopefully you can find a suitable replacement.

Functionality. VOX vs. Clementine

Clementine

Clementine is an audio player and library organizer, with the interface similar to iTunes’s and many features for the playback control. Overall use is simple – to add files you just drop your files to the player. What I liked most is that you can listen to music you have in Box, Dropbox, Google Drive, and OneDrive. You can edit meta tags right (only on MP3 and OGG files) in the app and Clementine automatically finds lyrics and album covers if they are missing.

VOX Music Player

VOX is more about the playback. The app puts an accent on simplicity so that users don't get confused with how to use the app. VOX includes only five tabs: Playlist, Library, Queue, Radio, and SoundCloud. Users can log into Spotify, and SoundCloud to listen to their music library using one app. Last.fm scrobbling available to keep the listening stats and get recommendations based on played tracks on VOX. The Radio includes 30,000 stations from 140 countries.

Compatibility. VOX vs. Clementine

Clementine

Clementine App

Clementine works on macOS, Windows, and Linux. You can control the playback using an Android device or a Wii remote.
VOX Music Player
VOX Music Player has a macOS and iOS version. The functionality of desktop and mobile is pretty much the same. According to VOX developers, Windows and Android version are due in 2018.

Clementine Remote Mac Mini

Format Support. VOX vs. Clementine

Clementine & VOX Music Player

Both players support uncompressed, lossless, and lossy audio formats. They include AIFF, ALAC, FLAC, WAV, MP3, OGG, APE, playlist formats and more.
ClementineClementine software

Interface – judge for yourself

Clementine

Clementine app

Clementine Remote Mac Desktop


VOX Music Player


Additional Features

Clementine

Apart from the remote control, meta tags editing and lyrics search, Clementine has:

Clementine For Windows

  • Internet radio.
  • Smart Playlists.
  • Gar/Overlap.
  • Equalizer.
  • Internet services integration.

VOX Music Player

I've already mentioned Spotify, Last.fm, and SoundCloud integration. As for audio settings, VOX offers:

Clementine Player

Clementine Remote Mac
  • Equalizer.
  • BS2B (Crossfeed).
  • Track Buffer.
  • Gap/Overlap.
  • Sync Sample Rate.
  • Hog Mode.
  • Extra Volume.

Apart from that, there's an online storage for your music. It's called VOX Music Cloud.

The cloud serves as the main place to keep your music and stream from it to your devices. VOX Music Cloud is an unlimited online storage. You can upload there as much music as you want. It also has no restrictions on audio formats or file's size. If your upload thousands of FLACs, it's fine. You can listen to them on your iPhone and Mac. VOX Music Cloud is available only to VOX Premium subscribers.

Clementine Software

Clementine remote machine

Now that we've learned about these players, you can try any of them and see how it goes. I prefer VOX Music Player because it's easier to navigate and use in general. I really like VOX interface as well. Clementine would suit you if you have a vast music library and you want to integrate with various Internet services. But I'm not one of them.