Apple Music Classical009 Archives the company's music app that focuses on classical music only, has reached version 1.1, and with it comes an important new feature: The app is now available for the iPad.
The iPad version of Apple Music Classical doesn't have any outstanding new features, but the sheer fact that you can now experience the app on the iPad's larger display makes it a worthwhile download for iPad owners.
Launched in March 2023 as a free download for Apple Music subscribers, Apple Music Classical is very similar to Apple Music. It has no additional content, but the focus is entirely on classical music, with curated playlists, composer biographies, detailed descriptions of classical works, and a search optimized for classical music.
Apple says that version 1.1 of the app also brings stability and performance improvements.
SEE ALSO: Apple pulls the plug on its cheapest Apple Music planThe app was originally launched only for the iPhone; now it's available for the iPad (and iPod touch) as well, with the only requirement being iPadOS 15.4 or later. Curiously, the app is still not available for the Mac.
Apple Music is Apple's subscription-based music service, starting at $10.99 per month. It boasts a directory of 100 million songs, 5 million of which are categorized as classical music.
Topics Apple
Dude sneaks NSFW sign into live TV broadcastRachel Maddow has been cast in CW's 'Batwoman'Floating LED sculpture educates public about water qualityJ.K. Rowling's response to this meme about her death is absolutely classic21 Hidden iOS 13 Features You'll Want to TryNASA releases '3D Moon Kit' to help CGI artists to reHot Apple rumor: 'iPhone SE 2' could launch next yearReview: The Hydro Flask is a fantastic water bottleI love the 'Destiny 2' Twitter that just shares bonkers Steam namesAfter 11 years, the feud between Chili's and 'The Office's Pam Beesly is now overSean Spicer owns the domain RateTheReporter.comNASA releases '3D Moon Kit' to help CGI artists to re'The Walking Dead' Season 10 premiere roars with fire and death'The Walking Dead' Season 10 premiere roars with fire and deathKellyanne Conway follows @NoToFeminism, but does she get the joke?Granddad, believed to be the world's oldest aquarium fish, dies in its 90sVeterans group has some advice for Donald Trump in powerful new video'Shade' is officially in the dictionary, honeyFBI runs Facebook ads to entice wouldElizabeth Warren responds to Jacob Wohl's sexcapade smear campaign with a cougar joke Summer Reading; Formatting Horrors by Lorin Stein Who Needs the Pulitzer? We’ve Got Joshua Cohen! by The Paris Review Memories of the Lakeside by Lorin Stein Robert Hayden’s “Summertime and the Living...” by D. A. Powell The History of English in Ten Minutes, Dystopian Dream Books, and Other News The Hobbit Pub Sued, Build Your Own Murakami, and Other News Literary Paint Chips: Gallery 2 by Leanne Shapton and Ben Schott Something Out of Something: Talking with Etgar Keret by Rebecca Sacks Staff Picks: Sexual Humiliation, Advanced Style by The Paris Review Adrienne Rich by Robyn Creswell Horsemaning, Mars, and a Tiny Book by Sadie Stein Flannery O’Connor and the Habit of Art by Kelly Gerald Poems, PEN, and Poe by Sadie Stein Susanne Kippenberger on ‘Kippenberger’ by Miranda Purves Dear Don Draper, I Think I Understand by Adam Wilson Staff Picks: Whither the Library, Mafia Men by The Paris Review Things We Love: Vallejo, Factory Records, and ‘The Lonely Doll’ by The Paris Review Dear Peggy Olson, Nice to Meet You by Adam Wilson An Event in the Stairwell by Clancy Martin Something for Nothing by Ian Crouch
2.6515s , 10132.4296875 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【2009 Archives】,New Knowledge Information Network