Skip to main content

YouTube app teardown confirms upcoming ‘Music Pass’ subscription service

youtube music pass delay
Image used with permission by copyright holder

We’ve been hearing talk about YouTube prepping a subscription music service for a while now, and a teardown of its recently updated Android app suggests its launch may not be far away.

The app’s code, revealed by Android Police, includes references to ‘Music Pass’, more than likely the name of YouTube’s expected subscription service.

Recommended Videos

The code also makes mention of “offline playback”, “background listening”, and “uninterrupted music”. The apparent features being lined up for subscribers also include “no ads on millions of songs”.

With YouTube already the go-to site for many music fans, the streaming service will be hoping the offer of an ad-free experience and functionality that allows you to build playlists, enjoy tracks offline, and listen while using other apps on your mobile device will be enough to tempt users into handing over a bunch of banknotes each month.

A Billboard report in October suggested YouTube’s service will work in a similar fashion to Spotify – an already firmly established player in the subscription music service space – with both a free as well as a premium tier offered to subscribers, though with Spotify the former is only available to desktop and laptop users. The option to listen to tracks without the need for an Internet connection is another Spotify feature expected to come with YouTube’s service.

The ability to stream full albums could also be a part of YouTube’s music subscription service, which is expected to launch before the end of this year. As for pricing, the Billboard report suggests the company is looking at $10 a month for the premium service.

Of course, Google, which owns YouTube, already offers a music subscription service – All Access – though it’s struggled to gain traction in the market. YouTube, with a massive user base already in place, and with the added attraction of videos to run alongside music tracks, may have an easier time attracting paying punters and thereby giving competing services such as Spotify, Pandora, and iTunes Radio a run for their money.

Trevor Mogg
Contributing Editor
Not so many moons ago, Trevor moved from one tea-loving island nation that drives on the left (Britain) to another (Japan)…
How to turn off and manage your YouTube history
How to turn off YouTube search history – screen showing the history is off.

In an effort to help YouTube users clean up their YouTube pages for a simpler experience that doesn't scream recommended videos and bombard your senses, Google's video service recently announced some changes that will help.

By simply turning off, or even just pausing, YouTube's ability to keep track of your video viewing and searching history, as well as deleting your existing history, your YouTube homepage will be a much more hospitable place that only consists of the search bar (for those who prefer to search for what they want instead of having it served up to them), Shorts, Library, and Subscriptions buttons.

Read more
YouTube Stories are going away starting June 26
The Digital Trends YouTube channel on an iPhone.

YouTube today announced that it's going to kill off its Story feature — like the similarly named Instagram Stories, basically its answer to Snapchat — starting June 26. That's the last day you'll be able to post a new YouTube Story. And seven days after that, any story that already was live will die an unceremonious death.

That doesn't mean there won't be an alternative to a full-blown YouTube video or a smaller YouTube Short. (Which is, in and of itself, YouTube's answer to Tiktok.) YouTube is pointing creators to "YouTube Community posts" instead, which it says "are a great choice if you want to share lightweight updates, start conversations, or promote your YouTube content to your audience." Community posts essentially are ephemeral updates that also allow for text, polls, quizzes, filters, and stickers.  It added that "amongst creators who use both posts and Stories, posts on average drive many times more comments and likes compared to Stories."

Read more
YouTube gives iOS users another reason to pay for Premium
YouTube Premium on iPhone.

Subscription fatigue is real. But YouTube today just gave more reasons to pony up a few bucks every month for YouTube Premium, especially if you're on iOS. The big selling point for Premium, which costs $12 a month, is that you'll get rid of ads on your YouTube experience. That's worth it in and of itself. But you'll also get the ability to play videos in the background, download for offline viewing, and a subscription to YouTube Music Premium.

The new stuff adds on to all that.

Read more