Screamer Radio is currently my weapon of choice when hunting for new music. It’s simple, CPU-light and unconditionally free. It can handle just about any streaming format, your machine will hardly feel it’s running, and you can minimize it in the system tray.
Whenever I tune into something exciting, I hit the REC button and the output mp3 file is automatically encoded with the artist and song data. Using this information, I can track down the song or album and add it to my shopping list.
The installation file can be downloaded here. Apologies Mac and Linux folks but so far it’s only been available for Windows. After a quick and hassle-free installation procedure, you’ll get a notification: “Presets successfully updated from server!” In Screamer speak, presets means the list of online radio stations the app has collected for you.

How to Listen
I know you just can’t wait to get some music going so let’s explore the options on the Presets menu first:
By Language (NOT NATIVE) : Here you’ll find stations streaming in a language which is not native in the country where the station is based. A great opportunity to brush up your Croatian
By Network : a selection of stations like BBC and Virgin Radio whose different channels are available from the respective submenu.
By Region : stations arranged based on their continental geolocation – from Africa to Second Life. Now’s your chance to check out what the folks at Radio Maria in Burundi have been up to!
When you’ve found a station and you’d like to add it to your favorites, simply go to the Favorites menu and select Add to Favorites. To delete items, go to the File menu and choose Edit Favorites. The lines of code that open in Notepad are not a pretty sight if you’re not familiar with HTML but with a tiny bit of help from a friend and/or this tutorial you should be able to remove the unwanted items. Usability improvement in this area should definitely be at the top of the developer’s list.
Let’s dive into some deeper functions. Say you’d like to enjoy your audio at a consistent loudness level regardless of the output signal of the many different streams you might be listening to. Selecting the Settings menu, then Effects, and Compressor will do the trick.
If the balloon-delivered artist and song info before each track gets a little in your way, you can silence it by going to Settings, then Preferences, General tab, and Balloon Tooltips (un-tick).
At the time of this writing Screamer is available in twelve languages. To check if your language is on the list, go to Settings and Language.
More about Recording
Before you start stream-ripping, you might want to change the default folder where your mp3 files will be saved. You can do this by going to Settings, Preferences and then Recording tab.

While in recording mode, the Rec button displays the all-uppercase REC. To stop recording, hit the REC button and it will revert to Rec without stopping the stream.
Screamer automatically packs all your newly recorded files into folders with the title of the relevant radio station. Inside the folder your files are encoded at the kbps rate of the captured stream.
Another nice feature is the continuous recording option where each song is automatically recorded and tagged with the artist and song title in a separate file. On the other hand, if you’d like to record only the current track, just go to the Recording menu and choose Single Track Mode.
Happy streaming!
(By) Nik Simov is a composer, new media producer, English language tutor, and personal development guide. You’re more than welcome to visit his temporary base camp at Juliani Language Adventure.
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Filed Under: Cool Software Apps
Tags: music, radio, recording, streaming
Nik, what an excellent find. Screamer apparently has a ton of features that I love. The simple fact that I can record what I listen to on the fly is absolutely awesome.
I believe radiolover is a good mac alternative.
@Travis: Thanks, very happy you’re having a good time!
@Lucas: Will definitely check it out when I get my first Mac
This is one cool find. I can use it for my windows but guys is there any alternative for Ubuntu.
Anyway thanks buddy.
I’m sorry if I should RTFA more carefully, but I am confusing about how you select the streams; does it allow you to enter an URL? Or just select from it’s recommendations? Thanks
- bob
OMG! I sound like I just learnt English from my last post, I know I am not “confusing”, but the article is confusing me…
What I obviously meant was: “I am confused…”!
- bob
I used Audacity to do the job till now.
@ADI: Sorry about the inconvenience, my friend. Still, there seems to be a glimmer of hope and maybe an invitation to get involved: Here’s a quote from the Screamer site:
“Will you release Screamer Radio for MacOS/WinCE/WinMobile/Linux/x?
No. I don’t have the time to do the necessary work since porting an application to a different operating system is a big project.
However, with a bit of technical expertise you can get it to work helpfully under WINE in Linux.”
Thanks for the concern, that’s more than enough for getting things done.
@bob:
We’ve got two options:
- If you want a station added to the official preset list:
http://forums.screamer-radio.com/viewtopic.php?t=1340
- If you want to customize your personal preset list:
http://forums.screamer-radio.com/viewtopic.php?f=2&t=1070&p=3909&hilit=custom+stations+add+stations#p3909
Nik - Great find. Lightweight player that far surpasses the other ones I’ve found. Thanks!
Thanks, Dave! Really glad you find Screamer Radio useful.
All credit goes to David Zidar, a gentleman from Sweden who single-handedly developed the application and is generously sharing it with the world.
Cool app. I personally use StationRipper, which is kinda like this one