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Apple is taking a different route with the Apple Music Classic App

The well-known music streaming programme Apple Music was introduced by Apple Inc. in 2015. Users have on-demand access to millions of tracks, playlists, and music videos through this service. Additionally, users have access to curated playlists, live radio stations, and exclusive material from their favourite artists. The programme costs a monthly subscription fee and is accessible on a number of devices, including iPhone, iPad, Mac, Apple Watch, and Apple TV. The service’s entry into the classical music market makes the company’s most recent addition to the Apple Music family intriguing.

It is devoted to musical genres like those of Johann Sebastian Bach and Johannes Brahms, despite having many features in common with Apple’s current service, such as high-quality streaming up to 192 kHz/24 bit lossless formats, exclusive content, extensive search options, and the company’s recognisable user interface. The programme will be available later this month and can be downloaded for free, but using it will require an Apple Music subscription (other than the Voice Plan). It will only be accessible on iOS (15.4 or newer). Soon enough, an Android edition will be accessible.

It’s important to note that Apple’s decision to release Music Classical may have been made in reaction to Spotify’s recent introduction of a significant UI redesign. At the Stream On conference, the new Home feed and “experience” was revealed. It includes more previews, shortcuts, and discovery-friendly feed items, as well as suggestions, all in portrait mode. Although Spotify hasn’t said when its new user interface will be made available to all of its users, both paid and free, it is anticipated to happen shortly. Additionally, the business just released an update with a plus button in lieu of the heart button that was previously available in the previous Spotify version.

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