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    Background Music [Continued from Help/Support]

    Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved General Discussion and Gaming
    musicbgm
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    • johnboywJ
      johnboyw @samuel95_54
      last edited by

      @samuel95_54 said in Background Music [Continued from Help/Support]:

      @Darby
      try
      sudo apt-get update
      then
      sudo apt-get install mpg123

      Should work after the update.

      I have tried op way and also the mpg123 way. Neither give me sound. I know everything sound related is working as I can hear noises when I navigate around the emulator menus.

      ExarKunIvE B 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • ExarKunIvE
        ExarKunIv @johnboyw
        last edited by

        @johnboyw

        we need a little more info to help. do you have the commands in /rc.local correct if you are useing the op way

        and for mpg123 do you have all the commands for runcommand-onstart.sh and runcommand-onend.sh correct

        also where is your music folder?

        RPi3B+ / 200GB/ RetroPie v4.5.14, RPi4 Model B 4gb / 256gb / RetroPie 4.8.2
        RPi5 4gb / 512gb / RetroPie 4.8.9 -Basic
        Maintainer of RetroPie-Extra .

        johnboywJ 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
        • B
          backstander @johnboyw
          last edited by

          @johnboyw
          If you're using HDMI cable sound, try forcing HDMI audio out by adding hdmi_drive=2 to your /boot/config.txt then restart your RPi.

          Here's some more sound troubleshooting:
          https://github.com/RetroPie/RetroPie-Setup/wiki/Sound-Issues

          johnboywJ 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • johnboywJ
            johnboyw @ExarKunIv
            last edited by johnboyw

            @ExarKunIv said in Background Music [Continued from Help/Support]:

            @johnboyw

            we need a little more info to help. do you have the commands in /rc.local correct if you are useing the op way

            and for mpg123 do you have all the commands for runcommand-onstart.sh and runcommand-onend.sh correct

            also where is your musIc folder

            0_1490291515518_IMG_0510.JPG

            B 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • johnboywJ
              johnboyw @backstander
              last edited by

              @backstander said in Background Music [Continued from Help/Support]:

              @johnboyw
              If you're using HDMI cable sound, try forcing HDMI audio out by adding hdmi_drive=2 to your /boot/config.txt then restart your RPi.

              Here's some more sound troubleshooting:
              https://github.com/RetroPie/RetroPie-Setup/wiki/Sound-Issues

              I have sound just no music playing.

              ExarKunIvE 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • ExarKunIvE
                ExarKunIv @johnboyw
                last edited by

                @johnboyw

                did you edit the music.py at all?

                RPi3B+ / 200GB/ RetroPie v4.5.14, RPi4 Model B 4gb / 256gb / RetroPie 4.8.2
                RPi5 4gb / 512gb / RetroPie 4.8.9 -Basic
                Maintainer of RetroPie-Extra .

                johnboywJ 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • B
                  backstander @johnboyw
                  last edited by backstander

                  @johnboyw
                  Unless you have already edited your music.py script, you should move just your Music files to /home/pi/RetroPie/roms/music

                  Or if you don't want to move your Music files, you could just edit your /home/pi/RetroPie/roms/music/Script/music.py script to point to the actual music directory you are using like this:

                  musicdir = '/home/pi/RetroPie/roms/music/Script'
                  
                  johnboywJ 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • johnboywJ
                    johnboyw @backstander
                    last edited by

                    @backstander said in Background Music [Continued from Help/Support]:

                    @johnboyw
                    Unless you have already edited your music.py script, you should move just your Music files to /home/pi/RetroPie/roms/music

                    Or if you don't want to move your Music files, you could just edit your music.py script to point to the actual music directory you are using like this:

                    musicdir = '/home/pi/RetroPie/roms/music/Script'
                    

                    I've already tried it in that folder. That didn't work either.

                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                    • johnboywJ
                      johnboyw @ExarKunIv
                      last edited by

                      @ExarKunIv said in Background Music [Continued from Help/Support]:

                      @johnboyw

                      did you edit the music.py at all?

                      All I did was follow the instructions at the top by the op. That didn't work so I then tried the second one. That didn't work so I then saw another version in a different forum that I tried. Hence the reason why my music is in that script folder now.

                      ExarKunIvE 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • ExarKunIvE
                        ExarKunIv @johnboyw
                        last edited by ExarKunIv

                        @johnboyw

                        im sure that it will not do anything but put a enter after the &

                        (sudo python /home/pi/BGmusic.py) &
                        
                        exit 0
                        

                        this is from my rc.local so thats why its different

                        RPi3B+ / 200GB/ RetroPie v4.5.14, RPi4 Model B 4gb / 256gb / RetroPie 4.8.2
                        RPi5 4gb / 512gb / RetroPie 4.8.9 -Basic
                        Maintainer of RetroPie-Extra .

                        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                        • johnboywJ
                          johnboyw
                          last edited by

                          Thanks for all the help. I'm very new to all this. I've only just bought my pi. I usually just mess with phone ROMs. I've no idea when it comes to coding etc. But I'm prepared to learn.
                          I'll try the things mentioned when I get home.
                          Thank you.

                          ExarKunIvE 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                          • ExarKunIvE
                            ExarKunIv @johnboyw
                            last edited by

                            @johnboyw

                            not a problem. im still kinda new myself.
                            just keep asking and we'll keep trying to help

                            RPi3B+ / 200GB/ RetroPie v4.5.14, RPi4 Model B 4gb / 256gb / RetroPie 4.8.2
                            RPi5 4gb / 512gb / RetroPie 4.8.9 -Basic
                            Maintainer of RetroPie-Extra .

                            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                            • johnboywJ
                              johnboyw
                              last edited by

                              I'm also trying to get videos to show in the emulators. But that's another story 😂

                              ExarKunIvE 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                              • ExarKunIvE
                                ExarKunIv @johnboyw
                                last edited by

                                @johnboyw

                                that i have not tried yet. so good luck :P

                                RPi3B+ / 200GB/ RetroPie v4.5.14, RPi4 Model B 4gb / 256gb / RetroPie 4.8.2
                                RPi5 4gb / 512gb / RetroPie 4.8.9 -Basic
                                Maintainer of RetroPie-Extra .

                                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                • *
                                  **Scannigan** @backstander
                                  last edited by **Scannigan**

                                  @backstander said in Background Music [Continued from Help/Support]:

                                  @madmodder123
                                  You might try just putting mpg123 -q <dial-up-modem>.mp3 & at the very bottom of /etc/rc.local just above the last line exit 0. This should only play that dial up modem sound when you boot your RPi. Then you could still play other random MP3s by using /home/pi/.bashrc.

                                  If that isn't soon enough, you might experiment with putting that mpg123 line up higher in /etc/rc.local but make sure to make a back up of that file just in case!

                                  I have an even better solution for you. Problem with rc.local is that it's one of the last things to be called in the boot process, so the best thing would be to create a system service in systemd.

                                  Apologies I haven't yet worked out that pretty code embed system :) so this is probably not appropriate forum etiquette

                                  It's very likely that you have sound set up just fine, so I'm going to skip a few steps, in command line

                                  #at command type

                                  sudo modprobe snd-bcm2835

                                  #Create a new file

                                  Sudo nano /etc/modules-load.d/snd-bcm2835.conf

                                  #and in this put just:
                                  snd-bcm2835

                                  #Ctrl + O, enter Y and Ctrl-X to save

                                  #At command type
                                  sudo alsactl store

                                  #Find whatever sound you want to use, ideally a .wav name it boot-sound.wav and put it in /boot (you'll obviously need to do #this as sudo, so if using WinSCP just change the shell settings under advanced options before you connect.

                                  #Now create a service file

                                  sudo nano /etc/systemd/system/bootsound.service

                                  #Contents of the above should be:

                                  [Unit]
                                  Description=Boot Sound
                                  Wants=sound.target
                                  After=sound.target

                                  [Service]
                                  Type=oneshot
                                  RemainAfterExit=no
                                  ExecStart=/usr/bin/aplay /boot/boot-sound.wav 2>&1 >/dev/null &

                                  [Install]
                                  WantedBy=multi-user.target

                                  #Ctrl + O, enter Y and Ctrl-X to save

                                  #In command line type:

                                  sudo chmod +x /etc/systemd/system/bootsound.service

                                  #then
                                  systemctl enable bootsound

                                  sudo reboot

                                  johnboywJ 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                  • *
                                    **Scannigan** @backstander
                                    last edited by

                                    This post is deleted!
                                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                    • johnboywJ
                                      johnboyw @**Scannigan**
                                      last edited by

                                      @__Scannigan__ said in Background Music [Continued from Help/Support]:

                                      @backstander said in Background Music [Continued from Help/Support]:

                                      @madmodder123
                                      You might try just putting mpg123 -q <dial-up-modem>.mp3 & at the very bottom of /etc/rc.local just above the last line exit 0. This should only play that dial up modem sound when you boot your RPi. Then you could still play other random MP3s by using /home/pi/.bashrc.

                                      If that isn't soon enough, you might experiment with putting that mpg123 line up higher in /etc/rc.local but make sure to make a back up of that file just in case!

                                      I have an even better solution for you. Problem with rc.local is that it's one of the last things to be called in the boot process, so the best thing would be to create a system service in systemd.

                                      Apologies I haven't yet worked out that pretty code embed system :) so this is probably not appropriate forum etiquette

                                      It's very likely that you have sound set up just fine, so I'm going to skip a few steps, in command line

                                      #at command type

                                      sudo modprobe snd-bcm2835

                                      #Create a new file

                                      Sudo nano /etc/modules-load.d/snd-bcm2835.conf

                                      #and in this put just:
                                      snd-bcm2835

                                      #Ctrl + O, enter Y and Ctrl-X to save

                                      #At command type
                                      sudo alsactl store

                                      #Find whatever sound you want to use, ideally a .wav name it boot-sound.wav and put it in /boot (you'll obviously need to do #this as sudo, so if using WinSCP just change the shell settings under advanced options before you connect.

                                      #Now create a service file

                                      sudo nano /etc/systemd/system/bootsound.service

                                      #Contents of the above should be:

                                      [Unit]
                                      Description=Boot Sound
                                      Wants=sound.target
                                      After=sound.target

                                      [Service]
                                      Type=oneshot
                                      RemainAfterExit=no
                                      ExecStart=/usr/bin/aplay /boot/boot-sound.wav 2>&1 >/dev/null &

                                      [Install]
                                      WantedBy=multi-user.target

                                      #Ctrl + O, enter Y and Ctrl-X to save

                                      #In command line type:

                                      sudo chmod +x /etc/systemd/system/bootsound.service

                                      #then
                                      systemctl enable bootsound

                                      sudo reboot

                                      Wow. How the hell do people know this s**t.
                                      I'm definitely a beginner at this. Half of that I don't understand! Christ I've a lot to learn.
                                      I will try it tonight. Thank you so much for taking time to help me.

                                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                      • G
                                        gazzhally
                                        last edited by

                                        I can't seem to get the music to stop whenever I run vice. I've checked the code and its listed in there. Any ideas?

                                        ExarKunIvE 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                        • ExarKunIvE
                                          ExarKunIv @gazzhally
                                          last edited by

                                          @gazzhally

                                          which music player are you using. the one written by @Livewire or @synack .

                                          knowing this will help, get the help you need

                                          RPi3B+ / 200GB/ RetroPie v4.5.14, RPi4 Model B 4gb / 256gb / RetroPie 4.8.2
                                          RPi5 4gb / 512gb / RetroPie 4.8.9 -Basic
                                          Maintainer of RetroPie-Extra .

                                          G 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                          • G
                                            gazzhally @ExarKunIv
                                            last edited by

                                            @ExarKunIv Sorry, should have mentioned that bit lol

                                            Am using @Livewire 's player

                                            ExarKunIvE 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
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