Apple Music 1 and two new stations, Apple Music Hits and Apple Music Country, feature exclusive original shows from the world’s top music hosts and artists
Cupertino, California — Apple today announced two new live global radio offerings on Apple Music, now available to music fans in 165 countries. Beginning today, Beats 1, the flagship global radio station, will be renamed Apple Music 1, and two additional radio stations will launch: Apple Music Hits, celebrating everyone’s favorite songs from the ’80s, ’90s, and 2000s, and Apple Music Country, spotlighting country music.
Since Apple Music’s launch in 2015, Beats 1 has grown into one of the most-listened-to radio stations in the world, consistently delivering the best in-depth artist interviews, more global exclusives and premieres than anywhere else, and unique programming that produces culture-moving, news-making moments year after year. Throughout its evolution, Beats 1 has established an inherent camaraderie with the artist community and championed human curation and discovery — an approach that will continue across the three stations.
“For the past five years, if ever there was a meaningful moment in music culture, Beats 1 was there bringing human curation to the forefront and drawing in listeners with exclusive shows from some of the most innovative, respected, and beloved people in music,” said Oliver Schusser, vice president of Apple Music, Beats, and International Content. “Now, Apple Music radio provides an unparalleled global platform for artists across all genres to talk about, create, and share music with their fans, and this is just the beginning. We will continue to invest in live radio and create opportunities for listeners around the world to connect with the music they love.”
Beats 1 Now Renamed Apple Music 1
Apple Music’s flagship Beats 1 global radio station has now been renamed Apple Music 1.
With state-of-the-art studios in Los Angeles, New York, Nashville, and London, Apple Music 1 is the center for pop culture conversation and artist-led programming, and the global destination for artists from around the world to release new music, break news, and speak directly to their fans. Apple Music 1 is led by cornerstone presenters Zane Lowe, Ebro Darden, Brooke Reese, Dotty, Hanuman Welch, Matt Wilkinson, Nadeska, Rebecca Judd, and Travis Mills, and offers a lineup of shows from the biggest names in music, including Action Bronson, Billie Eilish, Elton John, Joe Kay, Lil Wayne, Frank Ocean, Vince Staples, and The Weeknd, as well as new shows from Aitch, Kerwin Frost, HAIM, Lady Gaga, Nile Rodgers, Travis Scott, Charlie Sloth, Young M.A, and many more.
Apple Music 1 also features several shows dedicated to celebrating the vibrancy of Latin music around the world, including a new show from J Balvin and listener favorites “¡Dale Play! with Sandra Peña” and “La Fórmula Radio with El Guru.” The station is also home to “Africa Now Radio with Cuppy,” showcasing the very best local African music and artists.
“Apple Music is home — it’s home to artists, it’s home to fans, and it’s home to incredible music,” said Zane Lowe, Apple Music’s global creative director and host. “I’m an obsessive music nerd. I love searching for the most exciting new artists and playing them right alongside the most essential, established artists of our time, because great music does not know the difference and Apple Music fans just want to hear great music. That’s what Apple Music radio is all about.”
Introducing Apple Music Hits
Apple Music Hits offers a full catalog of the biggest songs fans know and love from the ’80s, ’90s, and 2000s.
Apple Music Hits offers a full catalog of the biggest songs fans know and love from the ’80s, ’90s, and 2000s. The station features remarkable new shows from notable artists and hosts, connecting listeners with the stories behind the most popular songs in the world.
Apple Music Hits will be helmed by daily on-air hosts Jayde Donovan, Estelle, Lowkey, Jenn Marino, Sabi, Nicole Sky and Natalie Sky, George Stroumboulopoulos (“House of Strombo”), along with special shows from Ari Melber and others. Fans can also tune in to hear new exclusive shows from artists like Backstreet Boys, Ciara, Mark Hoppus, Huey Lewis, Alanis Morissette, Snoop Dogg, Meghan Trainor, Shania Twain, and more.
Introducing Apple Music Country
Apple Music Country showcases an increasingly diverse genre with a talent roster full of country’s most exciting voices.
Radio is part of the fabric of country music culture, and Apple Music Country amplifies that experience for the modern fan. As country music evolves and expands around the world, Apple Music Country aims to be the definitive place for every lane of an increasingly diverse genre. The station offers a mix of the best music of today while introducing fans to the stars of tomorrow and reminding them of the legendary artists and tracks that have shaped and defined country music along the way.
Apple Music Country’s talent roster boasts a wide range of country’s most exciting voices, including daily on-air hosts Kelleigh Bannen, Ty Bentli, Bree, Alecia Davis, Ward Guenther, Nada, and Tiera, plus weekly shows from Ashley Eicher and Kelly McCartney. Fans can also enjoy new exclusive shows from artists like Jimmie Allen, Kelsea Ballerini, Dierks Bentley, BRELAND, Luke Bryan, Luke Combs, Morgan Evans, Florida Georgia Line, Pat Green, Willie Jones, Chrissy Metz, Midland, Rissi Palmer, The Shires, Carrie Underwood, and Morgan Wallen, alongside exclusive shows from legendary producers and songwriters like Dave Cobb, Jesse Frasure, and Luke Laird, and journalist Hunter Kelly.
Fans can enjoy Apple Music radio wherever they listen to Apple Music, including iPhone, iPad, iPod, CarPlay, Apple Watch, Apple TV, Mac, HomePod, and on the web at music.apple.com.They can also ask Siri to play “Apple Music 1,” “Apple Music Hits,” or “Apple Music Country.”
About Apple Music
Apple loves music. With iPod and iTunes, Apple revolutionized the music experience by putting a thousand songs in your pocket. Today, Apple Music takes this to the ultimate with over 60 million songs, thousands of playlists, and daily selections from the world’s best music experts, including all of the artists and hosts broadcasting daily across its Apple Music 1, Apple Music Hits, and Apple Music Country global live streams. Since 2015, Apple Music has welcomed tens of millions of subscribers in 167 countries. Streaming seamlessly to iPhone, iPad, iPod, Apple Watch, Apple TV, Mac, HomePod, and CarPlay, Apple Music is the most complete music experience on the planet.
Apple Music has started a $50 million COVID-19 advance fund for indie labels. Through this fund, Apple will be able to ensure that artists still get paid despite the coronavirus pandemic.
Apple announced the new fund in an email to independent record labels this afternoon. Those labels who have a direct Apple Music Distribution deal and earn at least $10,000 in quarterly Apple Music earnings will qualify for the advances on future royalties.
Apple says that this program is in good faith that advances will be funneled to “arts and label operations based on financial need.” The email explains:
Royalty advances will be offered to independent labels with a direct Apple Music distribution deal who meet a minimum quarterly threshold of $10,000 in Apple Music earnings. Each advance will be based on the label’s past earnings, and will be recoupable against the label’s future earnings. This offer is in good faith that labels will channel funds to artists and label operations based on financial need.
In the email, Apple says that this is its way of helping during what are “difficult times for the music industry globally.”
These are difficult times for the music industry globally. Livelihoods are at risk, with multiple sources of income that our industry relies on vanishing overnight. Apple has a deep, decades-long history with music, and we are proud to be in close partnership with the best labels and artists in the world. We want to help.
As Rolling Stone points out, the music industry has been hit hard by the COVID-19 pandemic. Concert tours and major festivals like Coachella have been delayed or canceled entirely. “Most musicians rely on live touring revenue, as do venue workers, tour managers and many other live crew members who are now out of work,” the report explains.
Apple Music is the latest company to offer industry relief amid the coronavirus pandemic. It told independent record labels Tuesday that it is launching a $50 million advance royalty fund to make sure their artists get paid.
According to a letter sent to the labels and obtained by Rolling Stone, independent labels that earn at least $10,000 in quarterly Apple Music earnings will qualify for the royalty advances. To qualify, the indie labels must have a direct Apple Music distribution deal.
“These are difficult times for the music industry globally,” the letter says. “Livelihoods are at risk, with multiple sources of income that our industry relies on vanishing overnight. Apple has a deep, decades-long history with music, and we are proud to be in close partnership with the best labels and artists in the world. We want to help.”
The music industry at large has been hit hard by the ongoing pandemic. The live music industry has indefinitely been put on hold, and many concert tours — as well as major music festivals like Coachella and South by Southwest — have been postponed or canceled. Most musicians rely on live touring revenue, as do venue workers, tour managers and many other live crew members who are now out of work.
The recorded music business has been impacted as well. Access to recording studios while under lockdown can be challenging, and with much of the country at home because of physical distancing recommendations, music streaming is down and artists are pushing back release dates for upcoming albums.
Apple’s initiative is just the latest industry power player move to bolster the struggling business. The Recording Academy started a $2 million COVID-19 Relief Fund with its non-profit arm MusiCares, and it’s gotten several million dollars more in donations from high-profile music companies including Spotify, StubHub, Universal Music Group and Warner Music Group. Promotion giant Live Nation committed $10 million to its new relief fund Crew Nation to help live workers currently out of a job.
Apple is also one of several media platforms set to air Global Citizen and the World Health Organization’s One World: Together at Home broadcast, which will feature performances from Elton John, Billie Joe Armstrong and Billie Eilish among several others.
Read a full copy of the email below :
These are difficult times for the music industry globally. Livelihoods are at risk, with multiple sources of income that our industry relies on vanishing overnight. Apple has a deep, decades-long history with music, and we are proud to be in close partnership with the best labels and artists in the world. We want to help.
Today Apple Music is announcing the creation of a $50 million-plus fund available as advances on future royalties to independent labels, to help them pay artists and maintain operations.
Royalty advances will be offered to independent labels with a direct Apple Music distribution deal who meet a minimum quarterly threshold of $10,000 in Apple Music earnings. Each advance will be based on the label’s past earnings, and will be recoupable against the label’s future earnings. This offer is in good faith that labels will channel funds to artists and label operations based on financial need.
Label agreements for the advances will be posted in iTunes Connect, in the Agreements, Tax, and Banking module, on April 10. To receive an advance you will need to accept the Royalty Advance agreement and be on the latest Apple Music distribution agreement before May 8, 2020, at 11:59 p.m. PDT.
We hope that together we can help provide stability for artists by sustaining an enduring and vibrant music sector. If you have additional questions, please contact us.
Would you like to download music directly from Apple Music to iPhone or iPad? Doing so allows for offline listening, which is a really handy capability for many situations.
Like any other streaming service, by default Apple Music requires you to be connected to the internet. It’s all sunshine and rainbows as long as you’re streaming your music over Wi-Fi or cellular, but what if you lose connectivity? Or, what if you’re asked to switch your device to Airplane mode on a flight? The answer is pretty simple. You can’t stream music anymore. However, Apple does offer a solution in the form of Offline Listening, which lets you download music directly from Apple Music to iPhone or iPad.
Are you an Apple Music subscriber looking to download your favorite songs for listening offline? If so then you’ve come to the right place. In this article, we’ll be discussing exactly how you can download music from Apple Music to your iPhone or iPad for offline listening.
How to Download Music from Apple Music for Offline Listening on iPhone & iPad
Apple Music only allows you to download songs that are in your library. So, if you’re trying to download a song that you just looked up, make sure you add it to your Apple Music library first. Now, simply follow the steps below to download music to your iPhone or iPad.
Open “Music” app from the home screen of your iPhone or iPad.
Head over to the “Library” section within the app and select any album where you want to download your favorite song from.
Now, tap on the “cloud” icon located right next to the title of the song to start the download. Once complete, this icon will disappear, indicating that the song isn’t stored on the cloud anymore and is available for offline access.
Here’s another way to download a song. While you’re listening to a song in the playback menu, tap on the “triple dot” icon located next to the song title.
A menu will pop up from the bottom of your screen. Here, simply tap “Download” to store the song offline.
As for the last step, in order to access all the songs you’ve downloaded to your iPhone or iPad, head over to the “Library” section and tap on “Downloaded Music”.
That’s all there is to it. You’ll be able to listen to your favorite music even if you aren’t connected online.
It’s always nice to have a few songs downloaded as a backup just in case you lose connection, especially while travelling.
In addition to downloading songs available on the streaming platform, your Apple Music subscription gives access to iCloud Music Library. Thanks to this nifty feature, the songs you’ve added to your iTunes Library on a PC / Mac will be automatically available for download on the rest of your Apple devices.
Most streaming services including Apple’s primary competitor Spotify, allows you to consume media offline, so it’s nothing new. Despite all the advances in technology, it’s still pretty difficult to stay connected at all times. A power outage or loss of cellular coverage is all it takes to stop you from accessing internet.
Offline Listening is actually pretty useful for people living in rural areas with unreliable internet connections, regions with less than stellar internet service, and even developing countries where a majority of the people don’t have access to fast and reliable internet yet. Considering how streaming could get interrupted due to poor connectivity, it’s better to listen offline and avoid all the buffering issues.
Apple Music is a hugely successful music streaming service that was introduced back in 2015 to compete against the likes of Spotify and Pandora, and it’s a great service for many users because it’s baked into the stock Music app that’s available on all iOS devices. Additionally, the service is also accessible on Android devices via a standalone app, and available on Windows PC / Mac through iTunes and the Music app in MacOS Catalina or later.
Want to make a playlist with Apple Music? Of course you do! We all have a bunch of songs that we really like and listen to on a regular basis. If you’re an avid music listener, you might be interested in sorting out some of your favorite songs, so that you can listen to them while you’re on the go. Similar to any music application or streaming service that’s available today, Apple Music allows you to create, manage and share your playlists.
Playlist curation is key when it comes to organizing all the songs in your music library, and if you use the default Music app on your iPhone or iPad for listening to music, it just takes a few minutes to get started with a decent playlist. Sure, Apple Music does offer a set of default smart playlists based on your listening habits, but creating your own playlist from scratch might still be the better choice in most cases.
Looking to create your first playlist on Apple Music? Look no further, because in this article, we’ll be discussing exactly how you can create playlists in the stock Music app on your iPhone and iPad.
How to Create Playlists in Apple Music on iPhone & iPad
You don’t have to be subscribed to Apple Music service to create playlists within the stock Music app of your iPhone or iPad. Simply follow the steps below to create a new playlist and add your desired songs to it.
Open the default “Music” app from the home screen of your iPhone or iPad.
Head over to the “Library” section within the Music app and tap on “Playlists”.
Now, tap on “New Playlist” which is the first option in this menu.
Here, you’ll be able to add a cover art and name your playlist as shown in the screenshot below. In order to start adding songs, tap on “Add Music”.
In this menu, you can either search for any specific song in your library or Apple Music using the search bar at the top or you could add multiple songs at a time by browsing through your library. Considering how majority of the users would be looking to add multiple songs to their new playlist, tap on “Library”.
You can browse by albums, artists, genres or simply just songs which might be the easiest way to find what you’re looking for. So, tap “Songs” as shown in the screenshot.
Here, you’ll be able to browse through all the songs in your music library. In order to add any of these songs to your playlist, tap on the “+” icon located to the right side of each song. The selected songs will be indicated by a check mark. Once you’ve finished selecting, tap “Done”.
You’ll see the list of songs that you’ve selected under your new playlist. To confirm and create this playlist, tap “Done” at the top-right corner of the screen.
Not you know how to create a new playlist in Apple Music on your iPhone & iPad.
Creating a new playlist is one thing, but managing it is a completely different story as it’s far from an easy task. In most cases, your music preferences might constantly keep changing as time goes on, and you will have to keep updating your playlist accordingly, or just create new ones as your music listening preferences change and adjust.
That being said, if you feel like managing playlists is such a hassle, you can still make use of the default smart playlists that Apple Music has to offer, like Top 25 Most Played, Recently Played, Recently Added, and more, that constantly keeps updating based on your listening habits.
Curating your playlists might prove to be extremely useful when you’re busy doing something, for example while you’re driving and can’t afford to constantly fiddle with the Music app to switch between songs.
If you’re an Apple Music subscriber, you can enable iCloud Music library on your iPhone or iPad to sync this newly created playlist across all your Apple devices, so you can access it regardless of what device you’re using.
Additionally you can also share your playlists with other Apple Music users and even access their playlists, as long as they’ve made them public on their profile.
How would you like to automatically download songs from Apple Music to your iPhone or iPad? That’s an option if you have subscribed to Apple Music.
In addition to streaming music while you’re on the go, Apple Music also allows you to download songs for offline listening. This means you don’t have to stay connected to the internet in order to listen to your favorite songs, which comes in handy especially when you’re travelling. That being said, if you listen to a lot songs, you’ll need to download each album in your music library individually, which is far from convenient. Well, you can get around this by simply turning on automatic downloads.
Are you interested in turning on automatic downloads for Apple Music on your iPhone and iPad? Look no further, because in this article, we’ll be discussing exactly how you can set your device to automatically download songs from Apple Music.
How to Automatically Download Apple Music Songs on iPhone & iPad
The ability to automatically download the songs you add to your library is buried deep in settings. Simply follow the steps below to turn this feature on, and avoid any sort of confusion in the process.
Open “Settings” app from the home screen of your iPhone or iPad.
Scroll down and tap on “Music” to head over to the Apple Music settings.
Now, if you scroll down just a bit, you’ll notice a toggle for Automatic Downloads under the Downloads section. Tap once to turn this feature on. Here, if you have any songs downloaded to your iPhone or iPad, the “Downloaded Music” menu right above the toggle will display how much physical storage space your offline music has consumed.
Additionally, you can completely control how Apple Music handles your offline music when your iPhone or iPad is running low on storage. Simply tap on “Optimize Storage” as shown in the screenshot below.
Tap the toggle to turn this feature on. With Optimize Storage enabled, the Music app will automatically remove downloaded music that you haven’t played in a while to conserve storage space. Apart from this, you can also set a minimum storage limit for downloaded music on your iPhone or iPad. For example, setting a 16 GB limit will store approximately 3200 songs that you’ve automatically downloaded from Apple Music.
That’s all there is to it.
With Automatic Downloads enabled, you don’t have to worry about downloading songs one by one onto your iPhone or iPad anymore.
As soon as you find new music and add them to your library, the download begins automatically.
It’s worth noting that turning this feature on will not automatically download the songs that have been already added to your Apple Music library. So, you’ll still have to manually add them by heading over to each album in your library individually.
Automatic Downloads for offline listening comes in handy especially if you’re in an area with limited or unreliable internet access like rural parts of the USA, or for someone who’s living in a developing country where a majority of the people don’t have access to fast and reliable internet. Considering how streaming could get interrupted due to poor connectivity, it’s sometimes better to have your songs downloaded while you’re connected and listen to them offline without any buffering issues.
Over the last few years, Apple Music has rapidly grown in popularity to become one of the most popular music streaming services out there. That’s not just because people consider it to be better than the competition, but more due to how well it works within the Apple ecosystem. Spotify is great too, as are some of the other alternatives, but they aren’t as embedded into iOS and iPadOS as Apple Music, so for many people Apple Music is the natural choice for streaming music.
Apple Music price cut is possible before Christmas
Apple is seriously discussing its music services after Spotify and Amazon’s cutthroat offers on cheaper subscription rates. This is great news for consumers.
Apple is finally feeling some intimidation from other music services like Spotify and Amazon. They are hard at work, mostly discussions on how they can lower their own rates to compete well in this fierce market. However, will this even work? Is it too late for Appleto do this even after the competitors already sucked in some of its user base to their own services?
This is the case when it comes to Amazon Music Unlimited. It has the cheapest deal around. Here’s some of it listed down below:
Prime subscribers are charged $8 a month
Echo smart speaker users are charged $4 a month
Amazon Prime members are treated with the same premium services that Apple and Spotify currently offers.
When will Apple bring down the rates?
This will soon happen before Christmas. However, this will come under serious discussions as the price drop will go as much as 20%. It will start as a part of holiday promotional discount before it becomes permanent for all users.
If this is right, the rumor entails that an Apple Music license would drop from $9.99 to 7.99. For family packages, it would also be a $2 trim which could result to a new $12.00 monthly fee. The 90-day free trial window would be retained, and although Apple’s record label expenses are to remain the same with potentially shrinking revenues in the short term, the long-haul goal of fending off Amazon and Spotify is probably far more important.
Apple Music arrived last June, offering a music-streaming alternative to the likes to Spotify, Google Play Music, Tidal and Rdio (RIP). You could reasonably assume that a big company with loyal users getting in the subscription game would put a dent in the top service’s subscriber numbers over the last 10 months. Well, apparently it hasn’t. In fact, it seems the exact opposite is true. Speaking with Reuters, Spotify VP Jonathan Forster explained that having Apple in the game is “raising the profile of streaming.” He also noted that the company started adding users at a faster rate when Tim Cook & Co. joined the fray.
“Since Apple Music started, we’ve been growing quicker and adding more users than before,” Forster said. The Spotify vice president went on to explain that the streaming business “would be terrible” if competing companies were just swiping each others’ users or if there was some cap to the number of customers. “I don’t think that’s the case,” he said. Spotify announced in March that it has 30 million paying subscribers as well as a free ad-supported tier. The company continues to add around 10 million paying users a year.
Spotify isn’t getting complacent, either. Earlier today, the company announced new video projects that include a dozen music-focused original series. Video was something the streaming service already offered, as it announced the visual episodes along with podcasts almost a year ago. The upcoming slate of shows builds on that, continuing to bridge the divide between artist and listener with performances, documentaries, interviews and more.