Bandcrash is a standalone program that automatically encodes an album of songs into a bunch of different formats for distribution on various platforms, such as itch.io, or for hosting on your own website.
Please see the online documentation for installation and usage instructions.
If you are developing under Windows, you will probably need to use a POSIX environment under Windows (such as msys or Git Bash) rather than WSL.
If you are developing under macOS, please use a universal2
build of Python (such as the ones installable from python.org) and you need to ensure that you've created your environment against that (e.g. poetry env use /usr/local/bin/python3.11
).
See the github issues for details, but roughly:
album.json
easier (and easier installation, especially on Windows!)Blamscamp and scritch are both great programs for publishing previews of already-encoded on itch.io and other websites! However, their functionality is only to bundle prepared audio files into a web-based player, and they don't presently handle encoding or tagging, two things that are historically tedious and difficult to do well.
Bandcrash is a full end-to-end system for preparing an album for both sale and preview online in a variety of formats.
Faircamp does handle the end-to-end encoding and processing and builds a quite beautiful static website! If you just want to build a site to host your music and handle your own payments, it's totally usable for that.
Bandcrash is for people who want to be able to host their downloads and web-based preview on existing marketplaces such as itch.io, gumroad, ko-fi, etc., or who want to be able to embed their preview on their website under their own terms, rather than being beholden to a specific static site template.
At present, it defaults to using Camptown, a player built specifically for Bandcrash. However, I do plan on eventually making it possible to choose from a variety of player engines, including Blamscamp and Scritch.
Back when this project started, it was named pyBlamscamp as the intention was to be basically a Python version of the blamscamp GUI which would also handle encoding steps for you, but it very quickly drifted away from that and became something else.
For a while, Bandcrash used a fork of the blamscamp player, but at this point that has been entirely removed.
You already have your large .wav files on your local hard drive. Your local drive is also a good place to keep your previous encoding results. Your local computer also has a lot more space available than a typical cloud server, doesn't have to juggle cloud storage credentials, doesn't have to worry about the security of the server running the encoder app, the cost of running servers or paying for cloud storage, and so on.
Basically, it's easier for everyone.
Sometimes local apps are just Better™.
That said, Bandcrash is also embeddable as a library, so someone could conceivably build a web-based system that uses it for encoding and tagging files.