Playlist De Apple Music A Spotify

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Young Vadlapatla

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Aug 5, 2024, 12:20:21 AM8/5/24
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not if you have the music library I do. I've listened to to music for tens of thousands (literally) of hours on Spotify Premium over the years, liked thousands of songs and created (or liked) over 100 playlists which I would all want to port to apple.

Both services are very good at offering like-minded songs when you play stations based on artists or single songs. If you know you like Adele or Galantis and want to hear more of that, making stations off an artist, album, or song of theirs is a good way to go.


Apple Music also has really nice stations based on genres. Once I discovered the names of song styles I liked from Stats.fm, this made finding new music and music discovery in Apple Music much easier.


My hunch is Apple Music relies more on tastemakers and humans to cobble these together, whereas Spotify might rely more on vast algorithms that recognize people listening to one or two artists also often listen to a bunch of similar artists and suggest playlists that match these artists. Ultimately, some things are obvious. If you like the Beatles, you probably also like listening to The Rolling Stones. How the two get paired is irrelevant.


I was expecting Spotify to always suggest things I just freaking loved and when it failed, I assumed it was because it was a bum week or there was no good music. I was expecting Apple Music to figure out what I liked with a fraction of the usage time as Spotify and still do the same. I was also expecting Apple Music to behave like Spotify and really, I had too low expectations about myself because I lacked the understanding of what I really liked and closed myself off to many options.


Don't worry - it's quick and painless! Just click below, and once you're logged in we'll bring you right back here and post your question. We'll remember what you've already typed in so you won't have to do it again.


you can use this app but there a different subscriptions and the subscriptions are all different as they have apple, android and a few more etc and each subscription has different terms and conditions as they are not the same eg the free one can be used on almost any device but only a limit to 10 songs per session and 1 playlist per session. for the android subscription($12.99) its only for android but it gives unlimited songs per session adn unlimited playlists per session. theres a bundle that gives you access to everything ($19.99). i hope this was helpful


Apple Music appears to be beta testing integration with a service called SongShift, for transferring music from other services into Apple Music. The feature is currently being A/B tested in the latest beta version of Apple Music on Android, according to user reports on Reddit.


For those unfamiliar, SongShift is a third-party service that has been available for years. It lets users easily move their music libraries and playlists between different music streaming services. For instance, you can use the SongShift app to transfer your playlists from Apple Music to Spotify or vice versa.


This integration is powered by SongShift. Essentially, Apple appears to be integrating SongShift into the Apple Music for Android app to make it easier for users to switch from Spotify and other services to Apple Music.


Whether Apple has plans to also bring SongShift integration to Apple Music on iPhone remains to be seen. Typically, however, Apple Music for Android and Apple Music for iPhone are kept at feature parity.


I resisted streaming services for years, as I prefer the security of using my own local music library filled with tracks imported from obscure CDs and songs I bought on Bandcamp. But, eventually, I decided to sign up for Spotify to listen to new releases before buying them.


I grew to like the personalized playlists and easy access to such a large and diverse music collection. But as the app refocused on podcasts, I found it too hard to find what I was looking for. This was especially true when searching for a good workout playlist.


Of course, this may all change later this year when Apple unveils its new AI tools in iOS 18. I'd love if my iPhone could understand context; so, if I open a workout app, Music would know I'm about to exercise and start playing a personalized fitness-focused playlist. Maybe one day.


Meanwhile, Spotify has a far larger collection of workout-themed playlists, has recently introduced the ability to create the perfect playlist from a text prompt using AI, and there are vastly more public playlists created by other users that you can add to your library.


The main downside to Apple's approach is that a single playlist will never please everyone. You may love a certain track and feel entirely put off by another. And I prefer training to songs that keep a similar beat and intensity the whole way through, so find I need to skip tracks that don't fit that format.


Whatever my personal thoughts, Spotify is the default music streaming app for most people, so yoga teachers, personal trainers, and fitness instructors often put together custom playlists for their classes or clients that you can find on Spotify too.


These are usually designed specifically for your session, and many trainers and instructors adjust the run order so that the tempo fits with the flow of the class, building up to a crescendo before slowing the pace for you to cool down and recover.


The user-generated playlists are particularly useful, as you're quite likely to find something that matches (or, at least, resembles) what you'd like to listen to. And then you can just copy the tracks into a new list, add a few others, and then you're good to go.


These two apps work well together, so if you take a class in Fitness Plus, the music is all listed with a link to the corresponding Apple Music playlist. And you can choose sessions specifically for their music, with workouts celebrating album anniversaries or Super Bowl halftime show headliners.


I liked this integration when I used Apple Fitness Plus, but as I review a lot of different apps, I haven't kept up my subscription. It would be great to see Apple roll this out beyond its own platforms though. Especially since some apps, like Centr, have dedicated Apple Music playlists that could be integrated into the app.


If you subscribe to the spotify premium service, you can download Spotify songs to the spotify desktop application on your computer, but these downloaded files are offline cached files, and you can only listen to it on the spotify desktop application.


I wanna find some apps to help me download Spotify music to local. Luckily, I find AudFun Spotify downloader, which can download Spotify tracks to local and save tracks as MP3. I have used AudFun Spotify downloader for a while now, and very happy with it.


You don't have to pay for Spotify's subscription every time. With AMusicSoft Spotify Music Converter, you can download Spotify songs from Spotify for playback on a computer or transfer to other devices without a Spotify subscription. The program is compatible with Windows and Mac. AMusicSoft offers a free trial now, you can try its downloading feature before subscribing AMusicSoft.


TunesFun Spotify Music Converter provides you with a free trial that lets you convert Spotify songs for free. You can convert as many Spotify songs to MP3 as you want with the free version. All songs converted will be lossless as the paid version, providing you with the best playback experience.


Hello, OP.

Actually, the songs downloaded with Spotify Premium are streamed in Spotify but not local file. You need a third-party tool to download Spotify tracks to your computer because of the DRM protection of the tracks. You may try Spotify Music Unlocker that can convert Spotify tracks to various formats like MP3, WAV and FLAC. With this tool, you can also choose the output files on your pc for the downloaded tracks. Hope this helps you.

All the best.


If you subscribe to Spotify Premium, you can download Spotify songs to the Spotify desktop app on your computer, but you can only listen to them on the Spotify desktop app. This is also a problem. Later, I tried to find some tools online to solve this problem, and I found the TunesFun Spotify Music Converter application to help me download Spotify music to my local computer. It can download Spotify tracks locally and save the tracks as MP3. I've been using this downloader for over a year and am very satisfied.


...so I can export my playlist to any other music service. So I can create playlists based on my home computer music files but also listen to the same playlist with other music sources. Does that answer your question?


My scenario would be when we have added tracks to a Sonos queue and want to save it to Tidal or Deezer or wherever for playing in the car or elsewhere at a later date. At the moment we are stuck with it existing in Sonos only.


Exporting a Sonos playlist as xml can be done with a simple UPnP tool and is documented on here somewhere. The hard part is importing. Each music service uses its own unique playlist format, but you can use a third party service (soundiiz) to convert it (so others have said, I have no personal experience).


In the end, as I was in a hurry, I left the Sonos window open, opened itunes in same screen and looked up each track from the Sonos playlist and made an itunes playlist. Highlighted that, copied to usb. Job done - the old fashioned way!!


1. Ensure you have a Raspberry PI running with the Sonos API installed -sonos-http-api

2. Create a new Excel workbook on the same network that both your Raspberry Pi and Sonos are connected to

3. In Excel, go to the 'Data' click on the 'From Web' option and put in the Sonos API query string _IP:5005/Room Name/queue

4. Once the Excel Power Query Editor opens, right click on the 'List' column header and select 'To Table' and Click 'Ok' (No options should be selected)

5. In the Converted to Table step, click on the left/right arrows icon in the 'Column1' header and leave all columns checked, however uncheck the 'Use original column name as prefix' option and Click 'OK'

6. In the Excel 'Home' Ribbon, click 'Close & Load'

7. Save your new workbook for future use (you can use this to refresh with your current Sonos que at anytime)

8. To convert your current Sonos que to another platform play list, in Excel go to 'File' and export to a CSV (Comma delimited) file and save the name of the file as the description of your playlist

9. Go to and get choose 'Let's Start' and choose the 'Upload file' from the bottom of the page.

10. From there, everything should be self explanatory

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