YouTube Music sorting is widely rolling out with version 3.29 on both Android and iOS, but it’s not available on the web client. In an interview with Engadget a few months after launch, Google promised that sorting was “firmly on the roadmap.” It’s unfortunate that the feature took a year for the YouTube team to tackle. This long overdue and basic feature was first promised last August. Note that Clementine caches art separately for every grouping, so showing by 'Album' and then changing the grouping to something like 'Artist/Album' will reload all covers from. All of my 1000+ albums show art, with none missing. It’s not available on the Device Files tab of local files. Since the last stable release (1.2.3), Clementine now caches art in the Library view, and that cleared it up for me. Your choice is specific to a page, and can be independently set. “Recently added” is the default, but heading to any of those four sections in the Library tab reveals a new dropdown menu. YouTube Music now lets you sort content by alphabetical (A to Z) or reverse alphabetical (Z to A) order. Reverse chronological order is a very YouTube and feed-inspired choice, but not one that scales well to large libraries. This included the playlists you’ve created, saved albums, liked songs, and subscribed artists.
Since launch, Google’s latest streaming service has arranged your library by recently added. The ability to sort albums and playlists is now finally available on Android and iOS. Clementine is released under the terms of the GPL-3.0-or-later. It is available for Unix-like, Windows and macOS. It is a port of Amarok 1.4 to the Qt 4 framework and the GStreamer multimedia framework. In addition to lacking major features like a cloud locker and migrating playlists, YouTube Music is still missing basic functionality expected in an audio player. Clementine is a free and open-source audio player.