![]() While the free tiers of both Spotify and Amazon Music limit the sound quality, the paid offerings up this significantly.Īmazon Music Unlimited not only offers lossless CD-quality audio to “double the bitrate of standard definition streaming services”, but also offers Ultra High Definition audio for “over 7 million” of its songs. ![]() Plus, 60,000 songs are apparently added to Spotify every day (opens in new tab), which could well mean the company has closed the gap in the intervening year.Īll we can say is that there don’t seem to be any real black spots in either - unless you’re a big fan of Neil Young and Joni Mitchell, who recently left Spotify in protest against the company’s podcast moderation policy (opens in new tab). That sounds like a clear win for Amazon, but numbers don’t tell the full story: those 20 million tracks could be so obscure that nobody listens for all we know. Spotify is a bit more opaque about the size of its library, but back in February 2021, the company boasted of a library containing “ more than 70 million tracks (opens in new tab).” While Amazon Music Free and Prime have pretty small libraries (“2 million hand-curated songs” according to the company (opens in new tab)), Amazon Music Unlimited builds on this considerably with 90 million tracks. That’s $12.99 a month for couples that live together, and not only grants each a Premium subscription, but curates a charming shared playlist of each partner’s favorite tracks. While Spotify can’t compete with all that, it does offer a rather neat option for couples called Spotify Duo. Note that this only works on a single device, and it can’t be transferred, so if you have an Echo in every room, you’ll want a full Unlimited subscription regardless. ![]() This Prime-included plan doesn’t work with Amazon’s Echo smart speakers, which requires an Unlimited account, but Amazon does have a cheap alternative: for $3.99 per month, you can get an Echo-only subscription. Prime members also get an ad-free service called Amazon Prime Music included in their subscription free of charge: it doesn’t have the library of Unlimited, but it may be enough for casual listeners. For starters, if you’re a member of Amazon Prime, the price of Music Unlimited automatically drops to $7.99 per month or $79.99 per year (~$6.67 per month.) However, Amazon is a bit more flexible here.
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