![]() ![]() Amazon clearly wants to keep us roped in its rich ecosystem, and free access to loads more music is just one more way to make that happen.Amazon Prime Music VS Amazon Music UnlimitedĪmazon Prime Music and Amazon Music Unlimited share some common features. Those very valuable extras aren’t provided for free to Amazon Prime members, though it could be argued that the average non-audio enthusiast Prime member wouldn’t really care.īut even without things like Lossless and Spatial Audio, as well as the ability to select a specific track to stream from the 100 million song-strong Amazon Music library, an Amazon Prime membership is looking better than ever.įor $14.99 / £8.99 (opens in new tab) / AU$6.99 (opens in new tab) per month or $139 / £95 / AU$59 (opens in new tab) per year, you get free fast shipping, unlimited streaming of movies and TV shows, ad-free podcasts, Prime Gaming, 3,000-plus books and magazines with Prime Reading, and unlimited photo storage on Amazon Photos (this is just 5GB in Australia though). To do that, you’ll need to upgrade to a separate Amazon Music Unlimited subscription ($9.99 / £9.99 / AU$11.99 per month, or $7.99 / £7.99 / AU$6.99 per month with an existing Amazon Prime subscription) which will provide full, unrestricted access to those 100 million songs.Īmazon Music Unlimited, which ranks high on our list of the best music streaming services, also lets subscribers stream music in uncompressed and high-res formats, along with Spatial Audio and Sony’s 360 Reality Audio on certain tracks. The catch here is that you will only be able to shuffle play by artist, album, or playlist – you can’t actually select a specific song for playback.
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