Apple Music and Apple Music Classical are two separate iPhone apps. The key difference between the two apps is how Apple Music Classical handles metadata.
Apple Music and Apple Music Classical for Android now have the same distinctions, according to 9to5Mac.
Users can gain access to Apple Music Classical by signing up for Apple Music or Apple One subscriptions.
The app includes ad-free classical music recordings with up to 192 kHz / 24-bit lossless audio, as well as thousands of recordings that support spatial audio.
There are currently over 5 million tracks and over 50 million data points with data attributes of 20,000+ composers, 115,000+ unique works, and 350,000+ movements available on the app.
Apple purchased the classical music streaming service Primephonic in 2021 and announced plans to launch a classical music app in the future.
Apple Music Classical first appeared on the iPhone in March 2023.
Notably, the app’s Android release precedes the release of an optimized app for iPad and Mac.
In other news, Apple will be rolling up its ‘My Photo Stream’ service on July 26.
Users who are still using it will need to migrate to iCloud Photos before the deadline hits.
My Photo Stream is a free service that uploads the last 30 days of images (up to 1,000) to iCloud, making them accessible on the iPhone, iPad, iPod touch, Mac, and PC.