Spotify set to let fans remix tracks using AI
Not everyone is a born DJ, but if you’re keen to give a remix a crack, Spotify is looking to add a unique feature to its subscriptions, with something that costs extra.
Not everyone is a born DJ, but if you’re keen to give a remix a crack, Spotify is looking to add a unique feature to its subscriptions, with something that costs extra.
Much like when Twitter was a social network worth visiting and had a tick of approval for real accounts, Spotify is set to get something similar for human artists.
Data analysis packaged into cute graphics from Spotify and Apple Music is nice, but most services trying this approach really just need to stop.
Subscribers to both of the major music services can explore the data, and show off or shy away from what they’ve been listening to.
Records and discs may well be how many DJs cue their tracks, but if they have a Spotify account and the right software, they’ll now be able to spin their hearts out.
Not everyone pays for a music service, and folks who prefer to shuffle their Spotify for free can now pick the odd selection or two.
Better sounding audio is on the way for Spotify subscribers, but you won’t see high-res the same way Apple and Tidal do it.
While lossless audio still isn’t park of what Spotify delivers, access to the spoken word is increasing as the streaming service adds more audiobooks to customer accounts.
A more local-sounding AI DJ isn’t part of Spotify’s updates, but you now actively tell the virtual American DJ what to play and the style you want to listen to.
Speakers tend to look like speakers, but what if they didn’t have to? Samsung’s Music Frame hides the speaker behind art, yours or something else.