Tech Advisor

Get more from Play Music

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Subscribe now’ blares the banner at the bottom of Google’s Play Music control panel, and indeed, everything about the just-revamped app seems to be singing the praises of its subscripti­on streaming service, particular­ly the new auto-generated radio stations that sit in Play Music’s Home tab.

But even if you don’t want to cough up £9.99 per month to play a streaming shuffle on your phone (£14.99 for a family subscripti­on), there’s still plenty of free stuff to like in Google’s Play Music app for Android and iOS.

For example, you can bring pretty much your entire music collection wherever you go once you upload your tunes and create and save ‘instant mixes’ based on any of your songs. There’s also an offline mode and bandwidth settings to keep you from blowing through your mobile data, an equalizer for teasing the best sound out of your headphones, and even a sleep timer so you can doze off to your most soothing playlist.

Upload your music collection

One of the most powerful features of Play Music – namely, its ability to stream your music collection to your Android or iOS device – demands a lengthy, tedious chore on your desktop PC, but the results are worth the time and effort.

Google offers a downloadab­le ‘Music Manager’ tool that will upload music from your PC or Mac to your Play Music account, or you can drag-and-drop music files into the Upload window of Play Music for Chrome.

Google’s Music Manager tool does its best to ‘scan and match’ your tunes with existing tracks in the cloud, but it will end up uploading many of your songs, a process that could take hours or even days depending on the speed of your broadband connection and the size of your music collection.

Once you’re done with all the uploads, though, your music will be available for streaming or download in the Play Music app for iOS and Android, and even on Play Music in a web browser – and best of all, Google will let you upload up to 50,000 tracks for free.

Note: Any music you’ve previously purchased from the Google Play Music store will already be sitting in your online music library, and they won’t count against your free 50,000 song uploads.

Create and save an ‘instant mix’

Sure, the free version of Google Play Music will let you listen to streaming radio stations, but you’ll have to deal with some ads and

limits to how often you can skip tracks, and downloadin­g a station for offline listening is out of the question.

If your music collection is in the cloud, though, you can create ‘instant mixes’ of your tracks based on your favourite songs, albums, and artists, and then save and download those mixes to your Android or iOS device.

Just go to any song, album or artist in your music library, tap the three-dot menu button, and select Start instant mix. When you do, Play Music will generate a mix and start playing the first tune. Tap the mini-player at the bottom of the screen, tap the three-dot menu button again, tap Save queue, then save the songs in the queue to a new playlist.

Next, navigate back to the main Music Library screen, tap the Playlists tab, tap the three-dot menu button on the playlist you just created, then tap Download to save your mix for offline listening.

Switch to offline mode

Once you’ve saved a few instant mixes to your device, you’ll be ready to tee them up wherever you are, even if you’re offline – and indeed, if you’re intent on burning as little mobile data as possible while listening to your tunes on the go, your best bet is to switch the Play Music app to offline mode.

Tap the main menu button in the topleft corner of the screen, then toggle on the Downloaded only setting. Once you do, Play Music will only drop the needle on tracks that are already downloaded on your Android or iOS device, perfect for listening on the train or keeping your mobile data use in check.

Use as little mobile data as possible

Let’s say that you’re out and about and you’re itching to play an album that you forgot to download in advance. With the right settings enabled, you can still stream your music without taking too big a bite out of your mobile data allowance.

Tap the main menu button in the top-left corner of the screen, tap Settings, then scroll down and tap Mobile networks stream quality. Now, pick a setting. Low uses the least amount of cellular bandwidth but leaves your music sounding muddier than you might like. Normal strikes a decent balance between sound quality and mobile data use, while High spares no expense when it comes to delivering crystal-clear sound quality.

Tweak your equalizer settings

When it comes to audio quality, you can make your own adjustment to how your tracks sound by adjusting the Play Music’s equalizer levels, though only in you have an Android device. If you own an iOS handset you’ll be unable to access this feature. Tap the main menu button, then tap Settings > Equalizer, and toggle on the main Equalizer switch. The drop-down menu in the top corner of the screen lets you choose from 11 equalizer presets, ranging from Normal and Classical to Hip-Hop and Jazz, or you can pick User to mess with the quintet of EQ sliders.

Below the main equalizer settings are a couple more audio settings: one for Bass Boost and another for Surround sound, handy for giving Play Music’s audio some extra punch and presence. Note: If the Bass Boost and Surround sound sliders are greyed out, try plugging in a pair of headphones.

Tinker with your music queue

Just like the Music app on iOS, Play Music has a queue of ‘up next’ songs – in other words, a list of all the songs that are queued up depending on the album, playlist or artist you’re playing.

When you are playing a track, tap the mini-player at the bottom of the display to zoom it to full-screen view, then tap the queue button (the one with three lines and a little music note icon) in the top-right corner of the screen.

Now that you can see your music queue, time to tinker. First, tap and drag a handle next to a song to shuffle its position in the queue, or swipe away the song to nix it from the queue. To jump any song, album or artist in your music library to the front of the queue, tap the three-dot menu button next to its title and tap Play next – or, if you want your selection to play after everything else in your queue, tap Add to queue instead.

Check out your ‘cached’ music

One of the tricks that Play Music has up its sleeves is the ability to automatica­lly download a playlist of your recently played songs. If you ever get caught offline without having downloaded any music manually, you can count on your cached music to tide you over.

First, make sure you’re in offline mode: Tap the main menu button, then toggle on the Downloads only switch.

Back on the main menu, tap Home – and when you do, you’ll find a ‘cached music’ playlist, all downloaded and waiting for you.

If you’re short on storage space and you actually don’t want Play Music automatica­lly downloadin­g any music, tap the main menu button, tap Settings, then toggle off the Cache music while streaming setting (or Cache during playback on iOS). You’ll lose your cached-music playlist, but at least you’ll conserve precious storage space on your handset.

Clear out old cached data and downloads

Running out of storage space? There’s an easy way to instantly zap all of Play Music’s downloaded tunes, along with any auto-downloaded ‘cached’ music.

Head to the main menu, then tap Settings > Clear cache. That’s a move that could instantly free up hundreds of megabytes of storage, depending on the size of your ‘cached music’ playlist.

Next, tap Manage downloads. You’ll jump to a screen that shows all the downloaded music and podcasts on your device. Just tap the little orange buttons next to each track, album or artist to instantly wipe them.

Fall asleep to your tunes

There’s nothing like a mix of mellow tunes to help you doze off, and Play Music has a feature that’ll help you get some sleep without playing your music on all night.

 ??  ?? You can change the order of songs in your music queue by dragging the little handles to the left, or just swipe a track away to take it off the list
You can change the order of songs in your music queue by dragging the little handles to the left, or just swipe a track away to take it off the list
 ??  ?? You can get your music to sound just right with a little help from Play Music’s equalizer settings
You can get your music to sound just right with a little help from Play Music’s equalizer settings
 ??  ?? Google Play Music’s offline mode lets you listen to downloaded tracks when you’re out of range of cellular or Wi-Fi, or simply to cut down on your mobile data use
Google Play Music’s offline mode lets you listen to downloaded tracks when you’re out of range of cellular or Wi-Fi, or simply to cut down on your mobile data use
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Tap ‘Start instant mix’ to create a mix of tunes based on a specific song, album, or artist
Tap ‘Start instant mix’ to create a mix of tunes based on a specific song, album, or artist
 ??  ?? Google Play Music’s offline mode lets you listen to downloaded tracks when you’re out of range of cellular or Wi-Fi, or simply to cut down on your mobile data use
Google Play Music’s offline mode lets you listen to downloaded tracks when you’re out of range of cellular or Wi-Fi, or simply to cut down on your mobile data use
 ??  ?? Even if you don’t pay for Play Music, you can still upload your music collection, create and save ‘instant mixes’, tweak your equalizer levels, set a sleep timer, and more. Ben Patterson reports
Even if you don’t pay for Play Music, you can still upload your music collection, create and save ‘instant mixes’, tweak your equalizer levels, set a sleep timer, and more. Ben Patterson reports
 ??  ?? You can upload up to 50,000 tracks to Google Play Music for free
You can upload up to 50,000 tracks to Google Play Music for free
 ??  ?? Google Play Music’s sleep timer can help you snooze to your most soothing tunes. Tap the main menu button, tap Settings > Sleep Timer, then select how many hours and minutes you’d like to snooze to
Google Play Music’s sleep timer can help you snooze to your most soothing tunes. Tap the main menu button, tap Settings > Sleep Timer, then select how many hours and minutes you’d like to snooze to
 ??  ?? You’ll never be caught without something to listen to thanks to Play Music’s ‘cached music’ playlist
You’ll never be caught without something to listen to thanks to Play Music’s ‘cached music’ playlist

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