I really don't need Apple Music. I have all of Taylor Swift's music on iTunes and physical already. But my boyfriend is already on my family plan and he seems to have taken a really big liking to it and I like how it looks and keeps all of my apps and music and everything together in one place.
No. However I did download Purple Rain before Prince yanked it off AM, and it's still accessible in my library. With how glitchy the service is you never know.
Eh, I have back up versions except for her debut, so whatever. I'll still try though.
The only thing I dislike about Apple Music is that their playlists suck. Can someone tell me how to search for user made playlists? That was one feature Spotify excelled at.
Yeah, playlists are all I miss from Spotify. Plus I kinda liked how I could see what people on my friends lists were listening to.
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Originally posted by BabyCantYouSee
If I download Taylor's discography from Apple Music, will it stay once I stop paying for the service?
It shouldn't. You won't be able to keep it for offline play though
It did an automatic charge at the beginning and made a return, to check that my card was valid and working, and it was only $10.
How could it overcharge if nobody's really paying, going by your logic?
I got the situation worded wrong. Apple Music wasn't charging $12.99, however they are basically forcing other Streaming services to charge $12.99.
Apple has a basically 30% charge, where they get 30% of profit made from purchases in their store. So someone buying a usual subscription to Spotify would be $9.99, but purchasing through iTunes is $12.99 because they had to raise the price 30% to makeup for Apple's taxes.
The only thing I disliked about Spotigy were the annoying ads.
By the way, why do so many ATRL peeps like to change single covers on their iTunes? What's the point? It's not like you're going to pay attention to it in the long run.
The only thing I disliked about Spotigy were the annoying ads.
By the way, why do so many ATRL peeps like to change single covers on their iTunes? What's the point? It's not like you're going to pay attention to it in the long run.
I don't think any artist themself is powerful enough for the public to change what services they use to listen to music.
The only thing that could possibly make the public change services is if many artists altogether did a strike and removed their music from Spotify. But even then, I honestly think that would just make the public drift from Streaming altogether and go to illegal downloading if they see they're paying for services where artists can just get up and remove all the music to be petty.