You can finally listen to Apple Music in your web browser

At last, you can listen to Apple Music on the web, in your browser of choice, instead of needing an iOS or Android app, or iTunes app for Mac or Windows.

Ahead of next week’s “iPhone 11” event, Apple released a web-based Apple Music player in beta at beta.music.apple.com(opens in a new tab). Like Spotify’s web player, the Apple Music web player works in any web browser on all platforms including macOS, Windows, Chrome OS, iOS, and Android.

We confirmed the web player works on several Macs and Android phones. As you can see, the web player looks pretty darn similar to the new Music app that replaces iTunes on the upcoming macOS Catalina.

A screenshot of the Apple Music web player.

Apple Music web player.

Credit: SCREENSHOT: RAYMOND WONG / MASHABLE

A screenshot of the Apple Music interface on macOS Catalina.

Apple Music interface on macOS Catalina.

Credit: screenshot: raymond wong / Mashable

Apple Music subscribers have access to the service’s entire streaming music collection and radio stations. The web player also syncs playlists and includes personalized recommendations in the “For You” tab just like in the apps.

As The Verge(opens in a new tab) points out, the web player is missing Apple Music’s Beats 1 live broadcast, Apple’s original music videos, and smart playlists.

A web-based Apple Music player — even if it’s a beta version — has been a long time coming. Apple Music launched in 2015 and has grown to become a formidable music streaming service with over 60 million subscribers(opens in a new tab); Spotify has over 100 million subscribers, but in terms of music catalog and features, Apple Music has closed the gap significantly.

Make no mistake: the web player is greatly appreciated, but it’s sort of a trojan horse as Apple expands into services. Making its services accessible on any device will make them even more enticing for non-Apple users to take a dip into the rest of Apple’s ecosystem, whether it’s devices or services. Get your taste of Apple Music on your Chromebook and, next thing you know, you’re probably using an iPhone.

Still, it’s great to see Apple open up a little. Now, it just needs to do the same for Apple News+ and Apple TV+.

Featured Video For You

Apple’s iPhone 11 event coming Sept. 10