Xbox Music |
---|
The Xbox Music app in Windows 8 |
Opened | October 16, 2012; 5 months ago (2012-10-16) |
---|
Pricing model | Free streaming on Windows 8 in 15 countries (restrictions apply)
Paid unlimited streaming in 22 countries[1] US$9.99/month; US$99.99/year |
---|
Platforms | Windows 8, Windows RT, Xbox 360, Windows Phone |
---|
Catalogue | 30 million+ tracks[2] |
---|
Preview | 30 second previews of songs are available for free |
---|
Streaming | Yes |
---|
Trial | 30 days for free (renews to paid subscription automatically) |
---|
Website | xbox.com/Music |
---|
Xbox Music is a digital music service developed by Microsoft that offers music through ad-supported streaming, subscription streaming, and purchase through the Xbox Music Store. It is available on all of Microsoft's latest line of products including the Xbox 360 video game console, Windows 8/RT PCs and tablets, and Windows Phone devices,[3] and will have over 30 million tracks.[4]
Xbox Music is the successor service of Microsoft's Zune products; because of Microsoft's decision to discontinue the "Zune" brand in favor of the more appealing "Xbox" brand. Microsoft plans to focus the Xbox Music service to compete more directly with Apple's iTunes Store, Google's Google Play, Amazon MP3, Spotify and other streaming services.
History
Microsoft had previously ventured into music services with its Zune brand. The Zune Music Marketplace included 11 million tracks. The line of Zune players and Zune music store were somewhat unsuccessful, and the brand was largely discontinued at the beginning of the 2010s, although it continued to exist on different devices and the Zune Music Pass offered unlimited access to songs for 9.99 USD per month.[5]
Meanwhile, Microsoft had been emphasizing the strength of its Xbox brand because of its appeal to consumers. It had been expanding the multimedia services available through its Xbox Live to include services such as a video store and online game marketplace. It decided to introduce a new music service to build upon these existing features.
Microsoft introduced the new service at its press conference at the Electronic Entertainment Expo 2012 on June 4.
Xbox Music was launched along with Xbox Video service on October 16, 2012.
Features
The service provides a variety of methods to access content: via Free Streaming, via subscription (Xbox Music Pass) and through an online store for permanent purchases.[5] The service offers 30 million tracks.[5]
Free Streaming
Xbox Music offers ad-supported Free streaming on Windows 8 and Windows RT devices (computers, laptops, tablets) in 15 countries. There are no duration restrictions during the first 6 months of Free streaming. After that there will be a limit on the number of hours of free streaming allowed per month.[2]
Xbox Music Pass
It also offers the Xbox Music Pass which is a pay subscription service (similar to that of Zune Music Pass) that allows users to listen to their subscription music on any Windows 8, Windows RT, Windows Phone, and Xbox 360 device. The pricing in US includes $9.99 per-month and $99.99 annual subscriptions.[2] A one-month trial offer is available.
The Xbox Music Pass is available in 22 countries.
Xbox Music Store
For those who prefer to own their music the Xbox Music Store offers a comprehensive MP3 marketplace giving the opportunity to purchase single tracks or entire albums.[2]
Catalog
The service offers 30 million tracks from majors as well independent labels.[5] The number of tracks as well as the ways in which they can be used (free streaming vs subscription streaming vs purchase) differs per market depending on label agreements. Users can find music by searching an artist, album or song. They can also browse per genre featured new releases as well top artist, album and songs on the service.
Cloud Collection
Xbox Music lets users create a collection of songs and playlists that roam through the cloud on all the supported devices.[6] The songs can be either added from the Xbox Music marketplace or they are local songs on the user's machine that have been matched within the Xbox Music Catalog for the country the user is in.
Radio
Xbox Music enables discovery of new music with Smart DJ which creates custom stations based starting from a user chosen artist and navigating through related and popular artists. The user can also create a station with the top songs of any given artist. Users can enjoy unlimited skipping when listening to any of the stations.[7]
Offline listening
Xbox Music Pass allows you to download DRM protected songs from the Xbox Music Catalog to your device so that you can listen to all your favorite music whether you're sitting in your living room or stuck on a plane.[8]
Platform availability
Xbox Music is available for the Xbox 360 video game console, Windows Phone 8 smartphones and Windows 8 PCs and tablets. The service is also accessible using the Zune clients on Windows XP SP3 (and later) machines as well as Windows Phone 7.X smartphones. The availability across a variety of devices coordinates well with the Microsoft strategy of presence and integration on all devices. Analyst Michael Gartenberg believes the service will be available on iOS and Android devices,[5] Later after the release Microsoft confirmed via company blog that an Android and iOS compatible Apps are in the works.
Geographical Availability
See also
| Microsoft portal |
| Xbox portal |
References