Apple Music Classical is currently available on Android device, bringing the tech monster’s application for old style music to Android clients with an Apple Music or Apple One membership.
Apple bought the classical music streaming service Primephonic in 2021 and said it would soon launch a classical music app. In March of this year, Apple Music Classical made its iPhone debut for the first time. Prominently, the Android send off of the application precedes the arrival of an enhanced application for iPad and Macintosh.
The app currently has more than 5 million tracks and more than 50 million data points with the data attributes of more than 20,000 composers, more than 115,000 original works, and more than 350,000 movements. Through the app’s specialized classical music-specific search engine, Apple Music subscribers can use this data to locate recordings across the catalog.
At the point when Apple sent off the iPhone adaptation of the application, the tech monster made sense of that traditional works have various developments and tracks, while renowned pieces have many accounts with various symphonies, directors, and soloists. Additionally, because many composers have their own unique catalog classifications, classical music search needs to be constructed in a different way to take these complexities into account.
Keyword combinations such as composer, work, opus number, conductor, artist, instrument, or even the work’s name can be used by users to search for works. In addition, when you look up a work in the app, you can find all of the recordings that go with it as well as a performance that has been selected by an editor.
Primephonic already has an Android app, and the new Apple Music Classical will likely replace it, so it’s possible that Apple has launched the Android version of the app before optimized versions for the iPad and Mac.
The app’s Android version is available worldwide, with the exception of China, Japan, Korea, Russia, and Taiwan, and requires Android 9 or later.