The complete guide to Apple Music

The complete guide to Apple Music

Apple has at last introduced a music streaming service that, for a monthly fee comparable to similar services such as Spotify, gives you access to millions of songs by artists big and small. For £9.99 a month, or £14.99 to allow up to five other family members to use it too, you can explore hundreds of years of musical heritage and hear brand-new releases on your iPad, iPhone, Mac, Windows PC and Apple Watch – and more recently from your Apple TV, with Android devices to follow suit.

We've focussed the majority of our tips on the iPad and iPhone versions (which are almost identical) because of the popularity of accessing music on portable devices.

Browse your music

The complete guide to Apple Music

The views of your music that used to be in the bottom bar are consolidated in My Music.

The complete guide to Apple Music

This item saves you scrolling to or searching for things you likely want to hear a lot right now.

The complete guide to Apple Music

Tap a heading that shows a chevron to see more items or to modify the view. This particular heading provides ways to organise your music. (Sort your albums by title or artist in Settings > Music.).

The complete guide to Apple Music

On an iPad, your music library and playlists are two items in the bottom bar. On an iPhone, they're grouped into My Music.

The complete guide to Apple Music

Search your library or Apple Music's online collection.

The complete guide to Apple Music

Where you tap on an item matters. Large art shows an explicit play button, yet tapping elsewhere on it shows a track list. In the rows below, art is a play button, the rest of a row shows a track list.

New in iTunes 12.2

To use Apple Music on your computer, you'll need to update iTunes to version 12.2. Apple has already released a minor update to it, 12.2.1, which it says fixes a problem for iTunes Match subscribers that could cause tracks to be incorrectly replaced with versions protected by digital rights management.

It also fixes an issue faced by former Match subscribers, which requires you to follow a few steps. We've also encountered problems with track number metadata in our existing library tracks being changed, so before using Apple Music, the usual advice about making a backup – in this case, of your whole library, is recommended.

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