What's your favorite Apple-based music program?


The J.River Media Center comes highly recommended and was at or near the top of most of TAS's sonic evaluations in their 4-part series about computer-based audio (Dec'11-Mar'12). However, looking over their website and some supporting forums, it appears that it's really a PC-based program. According to what I read on a JRM user forum, JRMC works on a Macintosh if you use Bootstrap to install Windows 7 and run it from there. That runs into a bunch more money and I'm not all that enamored of running the music software in a non-native mode.

OTOH, there's ChannelD's PureMusic. It's $129 vs. JRM's $50, but it's very Mac-friendly.

Any other insights, recommendations, or warnings? I just got an AQ Dragonfly asynchronous USB DAC and want to feed it the best data stream without spending several more hundreds of dollars. I also want to be able to download some 24/96 and 24/88.2 files from HDTracks, so the music-handling s/w has to be comfortable handling FLAC files on a MacBook Pro (OSX Mountain Lion).
johnnyb53
I also second Audirvana Plus but make sure to get the new beta that supports Direct Mode as well.

I have Pure Music, BitPerfect, Amarra and now A+. I bought Amarra when it was about 600 bucks and the only thing they gave me when they dropped the price was a second licence (I should have had 6! :))

I used to prefer PureMusic but Amarra 2.3 onwards was a big improvement (I think rev 2344?) and it became my player of choice. The new 2.4.2 seems to have gotten that magic back from the releases post 2344.

But A+ is still my preferred player especially since it is the other player that can play back DSD files.
TAS did a brief comaprison of Audirvana Plus, PureMusic, and Amarra in the September issue. Sound quality sounded like pretty much a wash with very small differences between the three, but the Audirvana Plus had a couple features the others didn't -- ability to play higher rez DSD files (Amarra could "only" do up to 2.8) and ability to switch/compare DACs without shutting down). Best of luck.
What does "integer mode capable" mean? I've seen it mentioned on some of the music software websites, but not explained.
PCM is integer data

But the OS normally processes data in floating point (FP).

Integer mode allows the software to bypass the conversion to FP.

Doing this also bypasses upsampling and volume control