Skip to main content

Google challenges Spotify with all-you-can-listen subscription music service

Google All Access Music Service Announcement
Image used with permission by copyright holder
Sundar Pichai stands in front of a Google logo at Google I/O 2021.
This story is part of our complete Google I/O coverage

As expected, today Google announced a music subscription service at Google I/O 2013. Dubbed Google Music All Access, it works about the same way as Spotify, Xbox Music, and similar services and costs the same as well: $10/month. All Access integrates seamlessly with Google Play on the Web and on Android and with the music users have already uploaded to the Google Music locker. As long as you’re subscribed, music in Google’s catalog will download to your device and play right alongside the music you own.

As reported earlier, Google recently inked deals with several major music companies, including Warner Music Group, Universal Music Group, and Sony Music Entertainment. This means that the catalog of music you’ll be able to rent and stream is pretty vast. To help you find the music you like, Google updated their recommendation engine, which draws not only from your existing purchases but data from Google+. Based on this data and data about music, All Access includes smart mix playlists that draw from both the catalog and the music in your locker. The list of tracks is not only viewable, but listeners can dismiss tracks they don’t want and reshuffle the list. You can’t do that on Spotify…

google_music
Image used with permission by copyright holder

It’s easy to add subscription tracks to your library either on an individual basis or whole albums. The whole experience is far smoother on Android than the same maneuver with Xbox Music over on Windows Phone. From within Google Play on Android and on the Web, finding, exploring, and adding music looks to be a seamless and rich. We’re looking forward to playing with this.

Recommended Videos

What did not materialize is the YouTube based subscription service we’ve been hearing about for a while. Perhaps it’s coming later or just isn’t happening at all. 

Google Music All Access launches today and costs $10 per month. New subscribers get 30 days free to try it, and if you sign up before June 30th it will only cost $8 per month, less than the competition.

As exciting as this news is, would a Google subscription service be any better in the long run than Spotify? As our own Jeffrey Van Camp recently pointed out, services like this give you the illusion of a music collection that comes crashing down the minute you stop making monthly payments. Is it better to own or to rent in the music world?

(This post was updated from an earlier speculation post about the feature.)

K. T. Bradford
Former Digital Trends Contributor
K. T Bradford is a lover of gadgets and all things geek. Prior to writing for Digital Trends she cut her teeth on tech…
The Moto 360 and other older Wear OS watches can now download YouTube Music
Moto 360 watch face

Google is further expanding YouTube Music's availability on Wear OS to even more older watches. The company initially launched the app on Wear OS 3, with exclusivity to the Galaxy Watch 4, but rolled it out to a selection of older smartwatches powered by the Snapdragon Wear 4100 platform last month. A new report notes that smartwatches like the Moto 360 can now get it, too.

Google has confirmed the expanded selection, but the company did not share exactly which watches were eligible. Instead, Wear OS users are encouraged to check the Play Store and see if their device is eligible. As it has been seen on the Moto 360 and TAG Heuer Connected watches, 9to5Google speculates it could be rolling out to watches powered by the Snapdragon Wear 3100. This should encompass quite a few Wear OS watches, including the Fossil Gen 5, the Montblanc Summit, and the Suunto 7.

Read more
YouTube Music is finally fixing its most annoying limitation for some free users
youtube launches music feat

A select group of YouTube listeners will have plenty to sing about on November 3. Starting that day, YouTube Music will allow music to continue playing in the background, such as when your screen is turned off or when you’re performing other mobile tasks, for some user of its free service. The catch, however, is that this option will only be available in Canada.

YouTube hasn’t announced any further rollouts in other countries as of yet. A lack of a date in any other country, however, seems to be a not-so-good sign that it will still be a while before YouTube unveils it anywhere else. 

Read more
Google is finally bringing YouTube Music to older Wear OS watches
youtube launches music feat

Google earlier this year brought the YouTube Music app to Samsung's new Galaxy Watch 4 and Watch 4 Classic watches which both run Wear OS 3. It is now doing the same to older Wear OS watches running Wear OS 2. Not all watches will get it at immediately, though. The company will deliver it first to a select few Android smartwatches, before then rolling it out to more devices "later this year" via the Google Play Store.

The initial app rollout will come sometime this week, and it'll hit the Fossil Gen 6 smartwatch (Michael Kors Access 6 version included), the Mobvoi’s TicWatch Pro 3 GPS, the TicWatch Pro 3 Cellular/LTE, and the TicWatch E3. While Google doesn't exactly say it, these watches are all more powerful Snapdragon Wear 4100 watches. It's possible the company still needs more time to optimize the app for older Wear OS watches which typically have much weaker hardware.

Read more