Executive Jimmy Iovine has stated that the intention for the service is to become a "cultural platform", and Apple reportedly wants the service to be a "one-stop shop for pop culture". Originally strictly a music service, Apple Music began expanding into video in 2016. New subscribers get a one-month free or six months free trial with the purchase of select products before the service requires a monthly subscription. The service was announced on June 8, 2015, and launched on June 30, 2015. The service also includes the Internet radio stations Apple Music 1, Apple Music Hits, and Apple Music Country, which broadcast live to over 200 countries 24 hours a day. Users select music to stream to their device on-demand, or they can listen to existing playlists. Is this an issue you’ve experienced, and a solution you’d like to see? Please take our poll, and share your thoughts in the comments.Apple Music is a music, audio and video streaming service developed by Apple Inc. That way, it will always be there when I need it, whether that’s after switching to a new iPhone, upgrading to a new version of iOS, or the wind changing direction. Then if downloaded music is lost, the app should automatically re-download it overnight. Every time I download music, Apple Music should tag it in the cloud. ![]() My feature request, then, is a very small one. What I especially don’t want is not to know my offline playlists are gone until I need them. I can accept that there are scenarios where I need to re-download music, but what I don’t want is to have to do this manually each time. But Apple Music can be extremely frustrating. Love the concept and how it works when it works. But yes, this, restoring, allowing downloaded music longer or in a better way so we’re not missing it on our transcon flights when it’s too late, better large-library download performance (I have an offline playlist I try my best to regularly download, but it does NOT like trying to download them all…fails a LOT), and general performance improvements (even in the car or elsewhere when connected, many times it hangs trying to “find” or “decide” the next song FOREVER). Then it’s a game the whole flight of airplane mode with and without Wi-Fi to text a bit and then to get back to Music. Have to disconnect from the plane’s Wi-Fi. Also, even when it’s downloaded, if you’re connected to the plane’s Wi-Fi for the in-flight texting, but it naturally doesn’t work with anything else (unless it’s an airline that specifically supports Apple Music, of course), then the Music app is super upset and doesn’t want to play anything because it’s trying to talk to the server and can’t (even though songs are downloaded locally!). But I’ve also had the same thing happen with iOS updates, and sometimes without any apparent trigger. There’s one obvious scenario: when we buy a new iPhone and forget to re-download music. The problem I find with both services, but more often with Apple Music, is that it isn’t always there. Indeed, just yesterday Spotify CEO Daniel Ek said that the company was testing going further, and automatically downloading your recently-played music too. So there’s still a role for local music storage, and happily both Apple Music and Spotify allow us to download music for offline listening. We even sometimes visit places in the world with poor or non-existent mobile coverage. We fly on planes with either no wifi or plans which exclude streaming. We travel on underground metro services that have limited or patchy wifi. ![]() However, while Apple sometimes acts like it thinks we all live in an always-connected world of high-speed internet, most of us don’t. *It’s a long story why I use both, and I do plan to drop one or the other before long. I long since switched to streaming music as my primary source, and with unlimited data both at home and on my iPhone, I mostly stream from Spotify* or Apple Music directly. At home, I also streamed all my music locally, from a dedicated netbook and external hard drive connected to my hifi. ![]() I used to keep all my music permanently loaded on an iPod, so I always had all my music all the time. Your flight takes off, you browse through the music selection on the in-flight entertainment system, decide you’d rather listen to your own Apple Music downloaded playlists, and then… find they are no longer on your iPhone.ĭownloaded music seems to have a habit of disappearing from our iPhones right when we most need it … ![]() It’s an experience I’m sure we’ve all had.
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