Gulf News

Radio station goes live as tech giant bets on streaming

Feature to remain free, even for users who do not pay the $9.99 a month to stream artists

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Apple’s new streaming service went live Tuesday with a flashy radio station and artist exclusives, as the company that dominated digital music through iTunes looks to the future.

Apple Music got started with the tech giant in the unusual position of being on the back foot, as Spotify leads the fastgrowin­g market for streaming which offers on-demand, unlimited music.

The service is betting big on celebrity names to draw attention and scored a coup when pop superstar Taylor Swift agreed, after a heated dispute, to stream her blockbuste­r album 1989 only on Apple Music.

The centrepiec­e of Apple Music is Beats 1, which bills itself as a first global radio station, and will include guest hosts such as pop legend Elton John and rap entreprene­ur Dr Dre.

The radio station will remain free, even for users who do not pay the $9.99 (Dh36.60) a month to stream artists, and Apple has made the service integral to its latest operating system on iPhones.

Android smartphone­s

But in a tacit acknowledg­ement that the company lags behind on streaming, Apple also eventually plans a version for users of rival Google’s Android smartphone­s.

Another feature is called Connect, which lets artists post messages — keeping listeners on Apple Music rather than switching to social media.

Apple Music went live at 1500 GMT, with Beats 1 initially playing ambient music by Brian Eno as users downloaded the new system.

Beats 1 took to the air an hour later with host Zane Lowe, the New Zealand-born DJ who was poached from BBC Radio 1.

In a signal of Apple’s effort to nurture a cool factor, Lowe’s first song was not a blockbuste­r hit but the song City by the Manchester indie pop-punk band Spring King.

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