About Tune WP Theme

Tune is a music-focused WordPress theme developed by Wolf-Themes, built specifically for musicians, bands, DJs, and record labels. It ships with a dedicated discography system, event listings, and an audio player that keeps music playing as visitors browse between pages.

The theme integrates tightly with Wolf-Themes’ own plugin suite, giving you structured post types for albums, tracks, videos, and artists without relying on generic page builders to fake that functionality.

Tune supports WooCommerce for selling merchandise or digital downloads, and it connects with Spotify and SoundCloud embeds out of the box. The design skews dark and bold, which works well for most music genres. It is a theme built for a specific purpose, and that focus shows in the feature set.

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Brief 01

Tell us about your Tune project. Small fixes, Tune theme customization, or a full website build, whatever you need, we've got it covered.

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Wolf-Themes builds Tune for a specific niche, and its plugin dependencies mean generic WordPress advice often falls short. A developer who has worked inside the theme’s template system and knows how Wolf Albums and Wolf Events interact with core WordPress will get things done faster and without breaking the audio player or discography.

Through Codeable, you can connect with vetted Tune developers who have real experience with music WordPress builds. Post your project, get a clear estimate, and hire only if it fits. No commitment required.

Pros

  • Persistent audio player keeps music playing between page loads without interruption
  • Dedicated post types for albums, tracks, artists, and events built into the theme system
  • WooCommerce ready for selling merchandise and digital downloads from the same site
  • Spotify and SoundCloud embed support built in without needing extra plugins
  • Dark, bold default design suits most music genres with minimal styling effort

Cons

  • Heavily dependent on Wolf-Themes plugins, making it hard to switch themes later without losing content
  • Limited layout variety compared to multipurpose themes, which restricts non-music page designs
  • The audio player can conflict with certain caching configurations and needs careful setup
  • WPBakery Page Builder dependency feels dated compared to block-based editing workflows
  • Documentation is sparse in places, particularly around advanced plugin hook customization

Who is Tune for?

Independent Musicians

Solo artists can use Tune to publish a full discography, embed tracks from Spotify or SoundCloud, list upcoming shows, and sell merchandise through WooCommerce. The persistent audio player means visitors can listen to your music while reading your bio or checking tour dates without the track stopping.

Bands and Groups

Bands get a structured way to manage multiple members, albums, and music videos from one WordPress dashboard. The Wolf Albums plugin keeps releases organized with track listings and cover art, while the events system handles tour date management with location and ticket link fields built in.

DJs and Electronic Artists

DJs benefit from Tune’s audio player and SoundCloud integration, making it straightforward to showcase mixes and sets. The dark visual style suits electronic music aesthetics well. A custom booking inquiry form can be added to handle event requests alongside the existing gig calendar.

Record Labels

Labels managing multiple artists can build out individual artist pages, separate discography archives per artist, and a combined event calendar. WooCommerce handles physical and digital releases. With some custom development, the roster page can become a proper catalog with filtering by genre or release year.

Music Blogs and Review Sites

Music blogs can use Tune’s design language for editorial content about albums and artists. The structured review format pairs with the discography post types to create consistent album review pages. It works better than adapting a generic blog theme because the music content types are already built in.

Customizing Tune

Tune’s customization runs through the WordPress Customizer and the Wolf-Themes plugin ecosystem. You can adjust colors, fonts, header styles, and layout options without touching code. The sticky audio player can be toggled, recolored, and repositioned to match your branding.

Deeper changes, like custom discography layouts, modified event archive templates, or a unique homepage structure, require PHP and CSS knowledge. The theme’s template files are reasonably organized, but anyone unfamiliar with the Wolf-Themes plugin hooks will hit a learning curve quickly.

A Tune expert can handle full custom builds, child theme development, and layout modifications without breaking the core audio functionality. If you need something beyond what the Customizer offers, working with someone who knows the theme’s architecture saves a lot of time.

Recommended plugins for Tune

Tune works alongside several Wolf-Themes plugins including WolfWPBakeryPageBuilderExtension, Wolf Albums, Wolf Videos, and Wolf Events. These add structured content types that the theme templates are built around.

WooCommerce integration handles merch stores and digital sales. For performance, image optimization and caching plugins pair well with Tune since the audio player and video embeds add page weight. For visibility, proper schema markup for music events and albums improves search results. You can explore WordPress performance options and SEO support to get more from the theme.

Not sure which plugins to use? This WordPress plugins directory covers the most popular options with reviews and setup guides.

Tune common issues

Tune audio player stops working after plugin update

This usually comes down to a JavaScript conflict introduced by a plugin update, or a caching layer serving an old version of the player script. Start by clearing all caches and testing in a fresh browser session. If the problem persists, deactivate plugins one by one to isolate the conflict. The audio player relies on specific script dependencies from Wolf-Themes plugins, so mismatched plugin and theme versions are a common cause. Check that both Tune and all Wolf-Themes plugins are on compatible versions. If you’re stuck, a WordPress bug fixing service can trace the conflict quickly.

Wolf Albums not displaying correctly in Tune theme

Wolf Albums requires the Wolf Albums plugin to be installed and active. If album post types are missing or templates look broken, confirm the plugin is active and that you’re using a version compatible with your current Tune release. Template overrides in a child theme can also cause display issues if they haven’t been updated to match newer plugin output. Check the template files in your child theme against the originals. Flushing rewrite rules by visiting Settings > Permalinks and clicking Save can also resolve missing archive pages.

Tune theme event listings not showing on front end

Missing event listings on the front end are almost always a rewrite rule or plugin activation issue. Make sure the Wolf Events plugin is active. Go to Settings > Permalinks and hit Save to flush rewrite rules, which forces WordPress to register the event post type URLs properly. If events exist in the dashboard but don’t appear publicly, check that the post status is Published and that no page is conflicting with the events archive slug. A misconfigured reading settings page can also suppress custom post type archives.

Tune theme WooCommerce shop page layout broken

Tune’s WooCommerce templates are styled to match the theme’s dark aesthetic. If the shop page looks broken, it’s often caused by a WooCommerce update that changed template structure while the theme’s custom templates stayed on an older version. Navigate to WooCommerce > Status > Tools and look for template override warnings. Updating or removing outdated template overrides usually fixes the layout. If you’ve added custom CSS targeting old WooCommerce class names, those selectors may need updating too.

Tune theme redesign

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A good theme only gets you so far. If your site isn't converting, the problem is usually the design — not the theme. We can fix that.

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Tune FAQ

Wolf-Themes maintains Tune and releases updates alongside major WordPress versions, but there is sometimes a gap between a WordPress release and a theme update. Before updating WordPress on a live site, check the Tune changelog and Wolf-Themes support forum for compatibility notes. Running a staging environment before updating is the safest approach for any music site in active use.

Technically yes, but you’ll lose most of what makes Tune useful. Albums, tracks, artists, videos, and events are all registered by Wolf-Themes plugins. Without them, you’re left with a styled theme and no music-specific content types. The audio player also depends on plugin-side functionality. Tune is designed to work as a system with those plugins, not independently.

Tune was built around WPBakery Page Builder and the Wolf-Themes plugin suite, not Gutenberg blocks or Elementor. Basic Gutenberg block editing works for standard pages, but the music-specific templates and layouts are not block-based. Elementor can be used for general pages with some effort, but it won’t give you control over the theme’s custom post type templates without developer involvement.

Tune’s built-in persistent audio player handles track playback from Wolf Albums. If you want a different player, such as one pulling from a custom playlist or external source, you’ll need a plugin like CP Media Player or a custom solution. Replacing the default player without breaking existing album playback requires some PHP and JavaScript work to dequeue and replace the theme’s player scripts cleanly.

Yes, but you need to migrate the database along with the files. Albums, events, and artist data are stored as custom post types in the WordPress database. A standard migration that moves files and the database will keep all that content intact. Make sure all Wolf-Themes plugins are activated on the new host after migration to restore the post type functionality. Learn more about WordPress migration to avoid data loss.

Hire a Tune WordPress Developer

Need help building, fixing, or extending your Tune-powered music site? Whether it’s a custom discography layout, WooCommerce merch store, or a full site build from scratch, a specialist will get it done properly. Our developers know the Wolf-Themes ecosystem inside out.

Get a free estimate with no obligation. You’ll hear back within 24 hours through Codeable’s vetted network.

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