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May 8th, 2026

Liqoria: The Mac Dock Player That Should've Been Built In

Liqoria

The promise: A universal music controller that lives in your Dock and unifies Apple Music, Spotify, browsers, and more with animated artwork, real waveforms, and native Apple design.

If Apple were the company that so many people pretend that it is, it would make a music controller lives in your Dock and plays not just Apple Music but also Spotify, Youtube and more with animated artwork, real waveforms, using real native Apple design. The reality though, is that Apple Music is a storefront, not a music player.

Thankfully, we now have Liqoria, which quietly removes the whole category of app-switching annoyances that plague every other macOS music player. The Dock placement is better than notch-only players. The feature set makes it more than just a controller. The design is more native-feeling than 99% of indie apps.

Liqoria proves three myths wrong at once:

  • that all miniplayers belong in the menu bar
  • that you need multiple apps for different services
  • that Apple will one day build a proper music widget.

What Liqoria Actually Does

Four player modes in one app:

  • Dock Player -- Dynamic Island-style player docked to the macOS Dock, controls integrated directly where apps live
  • Floating Player -- Draggable desktop player with full controls
  • Menu Bar Player -- Compact menu bar integration
  • Lock Screen Player -- Full-screen controls with animated artwork

Liqoria doesn't just pass commands to Apple Music and call it a day. It is a standalone music player with built-in search, queue management, and playback control. You can search Apple Music and Spotify directly, manage your Now Playing queue (including Apple Music), and control playback without ever touching the source app.

The multi-player view is the real weapon. See all active music sources at once -- Apple Music, Spotify, browser playback, anything exposing to Control Center -- and switch between them. Most competitors show one source or force you to cycle. Liqoria shows everything at a glance.

The visual polish is borderline aggressive. Real FFT waveform visualization (that pulsing audio graph from Dynamic Island), animated album art for supported tracks (SZA's "Kill Bill" actually animates on lock screen), and that liquid glass aesthetic stolen shamelessly from Apple's design language. It's the kind of UI that makes you check if it's using private frameworks (it is, which is why it's not on the App Store).


Features Set

Built-in search across platforms: Search Apple Music and Spotify directly within Liqoria. No context-switching to the Music app or Spotify client. YouTube search is coming -- dev confirmed it's in progress but won't drop until it's ready.

Apple Music queue management: Finally, see and manage your Now Playing queue from a miniplayer. Apple Music's own app doesn't even show this in mini mode. You can reorder, remove, and see what's coming next without opening the full app.

Playback control that goes beyond play/pause: Like, shuffle, repeat, scrubbing, and the waveform visualization gives you a visual read on track activity. The dock player responds to hover and integrates clean with the Dock's native behavior.

Multi-source control: If you switch from YouTube Music to Apple Music, Liqoria can track the active source. The dev admits Apple's API makes this difficult -- play/pause sometimes grabs the wrong source -- but a dedicated YouTube controller mode is in progress to fix this.

Lyrics support: Already displays lyrics with major updates incoming. Current implementation works; future version will be a significant overhaul.

Customization:

  • Switch between liquid glass and standard styles
  • Configure dock player position (center/left/right)
  • Priority settings for multiple audio sources
  • Keyboard shortcuts for everything

The Competition

Silicio, VinylPod, Sleeve:
These are solid but fundamentally limited. Most support only Apple Music and Spotify, lack built-in search, can't display multiple players simultaneously, and ship with the same queue control gap that Liqoria fills. Sleeve's album art integration is pretty, but it doesn't let you search Spotify or manage Apple Music queues without reaching for the source app.

Dynamic Island clones (Menu Bar/Notch):
The notch obsession is the wrong approach. When the Island expands, it blocks menu bar items and reduces usable screen space on the MacBook. The Dock makes more sense for high-frequency controls -- your cursor's already there for app interaction. You can glance at playback without breaking focus on your main window.

Browser-based miniplayers:
Fine for one service, but they don't unify across sources. Liqoria's the unifier -- one player for everything, no matter where the audio comes from.


Real-World Use

The workflow that clicks:
You're working in a fullscreen app, music playing from Apple Music. A track comes up you want to pull up in Spotify to check the original or explore the artist. Instead of:

  • Cmd+Tab to Music
  • Copy/paste search
  • Jump to Spotify
  • Search again

You invoke Liqoria's search, switch sources, and never leave your workspace. The 72-hour trial is more than enough to decide if this friction removal is worth $9.90.

The dock player specifically:
I run hidden docks (vertical on the left for screen real estate), so I was skeptical. But the dock player only appears when the dock is visible, and vertical dock support is coming in the next update ETA May-June. Even without that, the floating and menu bar modes cover the hidden dock use case.

The Apple Music queue fix:
I recently switched back to using my own curated music collection over subscription sources. If you rip CDs or build libraries instead of streaming, the queue view alone justifies the app. Apple Music's mini player shows track info and controls, but you can't see what's queued or reorder. Liqoria surfaces this without forcing you into the full Music app.


What's Missing (Or Coming)

Vertical dock support: Confirmed for May-June timeframe. Current version works with horizontal docks and respects hidden dock behavior.

YouTube search: In development, no ETA. Dev refuses to drop a half-baked implementation, which is the right call.

Lyrics overhaul: On the roadmap. Current support works but the dev promised "major improvements."

Local file playback: Not yet supported, but planned. Liqoria can control audio from Finder Quick Look and 99% of apps already, but direct local file playback is coming.

Scrobbling support: Planned (Last.fm, etc.), not yet implemented.

Minor bugs: Some users report the menu panel not opening over fullscreen apps (opens to desktop instead). Dev is responsive -- moved conversation to Discord/email to debug directly. This is active development, not abandonware.


The App Store Question

Why no App Store? The dev uses Apple private frameworks for browser music handling and Bluetooth device control. App Store review would reject this immediately. Direct download via Lemon Squeezy, 14-day refund window, lifetime license for up to 3 devices.

The reality is you trade sandboxed convenience for the kind of deep system integration that makes Liqoria work. If you live inside the App Store walled garden, this isn't for you. If you want your music player to actually control your system, it's the only option.


Pricing & Availability

$9.90 lifetime license (up to 3 devices, deactivatable anytime). Free 72-hour trial -- full feature access, no credit card required. macOS 15.4+ required. Available at liqoria.com.

This is aggressively priced compared to competitors selling subscription models or charging $20+ for similar feature sets. The lifetime model alone puts it ahead of Sleeve and company.


The Verdict

If you use multiple music services or want actual queue control, Liqoria is an instant buy.The multi-player view, built-in search, and Apple Music queue management quietly remove a whole category of friction that nobody else addresses.

If you're happy with one service and don't care about queues, this might be overkill. A simpler miniplayer or the native controls will suffice.

If you have a hidden dock, wait for the May-June update for full vertical dock support. The floating and menu bar modes work now, but you're not getting the headline feature without horizontal dock access.

The Dock vs. Notch debate is settled: The Dock makes more sense for high-frequency interaction. You're already glancing at it for other apps, and it doesn't block menu bar icons or eat screen space. The notch obsession is cool until you try to click that menu bar item and realize the Island ate your workspace.

Real Utility Defined: Not in copying Dynamic Island visual flair, but in unifying disjointed audio sources in one place. Liqoria doesn't look native -- it is native, enough that some users on r/macapps genuinely thought it shipped with the OS.

72-hour trial. If you switch between Apple Music, Spotify, and browser playback daily, you'll know whether this is worth $9 within an hour. The animations and waveforms are marketing; the unified control is why you keep it.