Skip to main content

Digital Trends may earn a commission when you buy through links on our site. Why trust us?

Spotify is making it even easier to judge your friends’ musical tastes

An unreleased feature on Spotify, called “Tastebuds” is designed to let you discover new music through your friends’ lists by curating a playlist based on your and your friends’ similar tastes in music. 

Jane Manchun Wong, an app researcher who unlocks new features before they launch, tweeted screenshots of the unreleased Tastebuds feature on Wednesday, December 18. Based on Wong’s screenshot, the Tastebuds tab would be located in Spotify’s main navigation. The feature’s description says, “Now you can discover music through friends whose taste you trust.”

Recommended Videos

Spotify is working on Tastebuds, letting users discover music through their friends pic.twitter.com/uqUXmRvEKo

— Jane Manchun Wong (@wongmjane) December 18, 2019

There’s not much else known about the feature since Spotify hasn’t officially confirmed it yet. Digital Trends reached out to Spotify to confirm or deny the Tastebuds feature and to find out more about it. We will update this story once we hear back. 

Tastebuds is similar to the Friends Weekly playlist that the music streaming service previously tested. The playlist, which was never officially released was comparable to the Discover Weekly playlist, except that Friends Weekly was specially curated with songs recently listened to by your friends. 

You can already see what your friends are listening to with the Friend Activity tab. The feature shows what friend or public profiles that you follow are listening to in that moment. 

The Tastebuds feature looks to be a significant move by Spotify to incorporate more social sharing on the platform. You can already share what song you’re listening to on your Instagram story, and Spotify’s year-end roundup called Unwrapped gained traction on social media platforms where people used it to share the artists, songs, and albums they listened to most this past year. 

Spotify is also testing a real-time lyrics feature within the mobile app to enable a karaoke-like experience. There is reportedly an option to watch the lyrics on full screen, which should make it easier to sing along with them. 

Spotify (which offers Premium Subscription) remains the global champ when it comes to music streaming services. The service has over 100 million subscribers worldwide and has over 30 million songs within its catalog. In comparison, Spotify’s closest rival, Apple Music, has about 60 million monthly subscribers but has a more extensive inventory of about 45 million songs to listen to. 

Allison Matyus
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Allison Matyus is a general news reporter at Digital Trends. She covers any and all tech news, including issues around social…
Spotify is finally making it easier to block unwanted followers
spotify block followers hand holing smartphone playing

Spotify is rolling out a new feature that will make it much easier to block people that you don't want following your activity on the service. Until now, subscribers have had no control over who could actually see their listening activity and public playlists. Although you could make a request to Spotify’s customer support team to ask them to block a specific person for you, this required more effort, and many folks didn’t even know it existed. Your other option was to disable the social media part of the service entirely, but that's not an ideal solution for when you do want to share with friends. 

With the new changes, you’ll be able to block someone simply by visiting their user profile and looking for the Block User option in the Three Dots menu at the top. Once you do this, that person won’t be able to access any of your listening activity or even see your profile page. 

Read more
Amazon Music expands spatial audio to more devices
smartphone showing amazon music Billie Eilish takeover station

Amazon has announced that its streaming music service, Amazon Music, is going to significantly expand the number of devices that let subscribers listen to tracks in spatial audio. Starting October 19, you'll be able to hear Dolby Atmos Music and Sony 360 Reality Audio (360 RA) tracks on both iOS and Android devices using any set of stereo headphones or earbuds. The move comes a few months after Apple Music added the ability to listen to spatial audio on all iOS, iPadOS, tvOS, MacOS devices, and select Android devices.

“We’ve always believed that the highest-quality audio possible should be the norm for streaming music," said Steve Boom, vice president of Amazon Music, in a press release, "and that’s why today, we’re making spatial audio available to our customers without any special equipment needed, and no upgrade required.”

Read more
AirPods, Beats owners can get Apple Music free for 6 months
iPhone 12 with AirPods on top of MacBook.

Apple is offering six months of its Apple Music streaming service for free to owners of AirPods and select Beats products.

Eligibility for the offer covers current owners and future purchasers of the following devices: AirPods Pro, AirPods with Charging Case, AirPods with Wireless Charging Case, AirPods Max, Beats Studio Buds, Powerbeats, Powerbeats Pro, and Beats Solo Pro.

Read more