Skip to main content

Apple Music could be headed to third-party Alexa devices ‘soon’

Apple Music could soon see a significant increase in its subscriber count. As of this week, the streaming music subscription service now works with Amazon’s Echo devices. That’s hugely significant for Apple and Amazon’s Echo users who only had access to two major services: Amazon Music and Spotify. But buried in this launch is another significant detail: An Amazon spokesperson confirmed to Mashable that Apple Music “will be coming to other Alexa-enabled devices soon.”

This isn’t earth-shattering news. After all, most if not all third-party Alexa speakers — like the Sonos One, and our new favorite smart speaker, the Riva Concert — can already play Apple Music through a direct integration, or via Bluetooth. Still, being able to call up Apple Music songs, artists or playlists via Alexa, gives people one more reason to actually use Apple Music, instead of the competition. For Apple, this increases loyalty to its subscription service, and we imagine the artists who get paid for these listening sessions will be pretty happy about it, too.

Amazon and Apple’s new coziness puts added pressure on Google. At the moment, Google Assistant devices like Google Home, only support Google Play Music, and Spotify, plus Pandora in select countries. With Apple Music on Alexa devices, Amazon’s offering looks really compelling by contrast. Needless to say, this is all spectacularly frustrating for consumers, who now find themselves faced with a dilemma: When trying to choose a smart speaker, considerations like audio quality and power start to take a back seat to questions about which assistant you prefer, and does that A.I. actually work with your preferred music streaming service? It’s a situation that has caused companies like Marshall to produce Google and Amazon versions of the same speaker.

Of all the smart speakers we’ve seen, only Sonos appears to be headed toward true A.I. nirvana. By supporting Alexa currently and working toward Google Assistant integration for 2019 — using the same hardware — it’s going to be the first smart speaker that supports both major voice platforms and every major music subscription service. Once this happens, perhaps all of these companies will realize that giving consumers choice will always be better than restricting what they can do.

Simon Cohen
Simon Cohen covers a variety of consumer technologies, but has a special interest in audio and video products, like spatial…
Apple’s Dolby Atmos Music bounty could be a disaster for the format
dolby atmos music streaming debut on amazon hd launch

Apple is offering to pay artists more money if they provide Apple Music with versions of their songs recorded in the immersive Dolby Atmos Music format, according to a report from Bloomberg. On the surface, that makes a lot of sense, especially as Apple lays the groundwork for its soon-to-launch Apple Vision Pro headset, a device that will benefit greatly from immersive audio. But the move also could create exactly the wrong set of incentives at a time when the jury is still split over whether spatial audio for music actually is a good thing.

Apple has spent the past several years ramping up its support for spatial audio in general and Dolby Atmos specifically, through its AirPods family of wireless headphones, its Apple TV 4K streaming device, and virtually all of its computing products, too. Apple Music has a growing catalog of tracks in Dolby Atmos Music, and the Apple TV+ video streaming service offers Dolby Atmos soundtracks on nearly all of its movies and shows.

Read more
Got a PS5? Here’s how to get 6 free months of Apple Music
Apple Music on a PS5.

Apple is offering PlayStation 5 (PS5) owners six free months of its Apple Music streaming service.

In a deal with PlayStation maker Sony, Apple is letting PS5 owners enjoy all the benefits of the music streaming service, which offers around 100 million tracks for ad-free listening.

Read more
What is Apple Music? Music, pricing, and features explained
iPhone with Apple Music logo on the screen. A pair of Earpods lay next to it.

As ubiquitous as Apple Music might be in the world of streaming music services, sometimes it's nice to just have all the information you need about it laid right out for you, especially if you're trying to decide between it and its main rival, Spotify. And while Apple Music may no longer be the more popular of the two, it still boasts an estimated 88 million users worldwide as of June 2022.

Home to more than 100 million songs, curated playlists, social listening tools, Apple exclusives, and quality features such as Dolby Atmos Music, Spatial Audio, and hi-res lossless audio (something Spotify has yet to achieve), Apple Music shows no signs of giving up the fight. If you're thinking of grabbing yourself a subscription, we've broken down the fundamentals of the service to let you know what you can expect.
The basics
Like Spotify, Apple Music offers millions of streaming songs on demand. It also blends your personal music catalog with on-demand streaming and live radio, all in one place. At the moment, Apple offers a one-month free trial (or more if you buy eligible audio devices), and after the trial period, the service will cost you $11 per month for the Individual plan or $17 per month for a Family plan that accommodates up to six members. Students will pay just $6 per month.

Read more