I've been buying songs off Google Music. For the life of me I can't figure out how to download the music files onto my computer?
I've synched the songs to my phone so I can listen to them offline, but I don't know where on my Vibrant the files are placed.
I logged onto Google music via the web, and I don't see any option to download the files, all it does is allow me to play my music purchases.
What the heck? I'm about to go back to iTunes.
Can someone help me please.
Update
So I figured it out kind of. You can log onto Google Music via the web. Go to the list of your songs, then click the little arrow next to the song. It gives you the option to download the song onto your computer. It says there is a limit of doing this only twice.
The other option it says is to use "Music Manager" desktop application which doesn't have limits. Now my new question. How do I get Music Manager? I can't find a Music Manager application on Google search.
Update
What a STUPID PLACE to put the Music Manager desktop application download. It is under "upload" link on the right upper corner of Google music via web. Ya because "upload" is where you should put a download file. Idiots
Update
Now Music Manager scanned my hard drive and is forcing me to upload my music from my hard drive up to the cloud. Seems no way to opt out of doing this upon initial setup.
This is the worst experience. Is Google serious?
iTunes and Zune marketplace aren't even this complicated
Related
I'm a participant in Google Music (beta). I gotta say that I love it. Not having all that music on my devices is wonderful.
However, here's an oddity that I can't seem to fix or explain.
I ripped a CD to my collection on my PC on Friday. Saturday when I went to play that album on my Galaxy Tab it was there and played fine. Perfect.
Then, yesterday, I went to play this same album using Google Music (beta) on my Thunderbolt. It wasn't there. I couldn't find it in Artists, Albums or with search. Gone. I went back to look at my Tab and, yes, it's still on there.
So, the question is: Why doesn't my Thunderbolt have the new album? Is there a way to refresh Google Music?
Should I uninstall and reinstall Google Music?
Both the Tab and the Thunderbolt are running version v3.0.1.339
Settings, Accounts and Sync, Google, make sure Sync Music is checked.
You can press the Sync Now button there.
Make sure in Google Music player you have not checked "Offline Only" in Library options.
kierandill said:
Settings, Accounts and Sync, Google, make sure Sync Music is checked.
You can press the Sync Now button there.
Make sure in Google Music player you have not checked "Offline Only" in Library options.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Sync Music was checked.
I did the Sync Now anyway.
"Offline Only" not selected.
No change.
It couldnt hurt to re-install the app.
It appears to be a combination of a bug in Google Music and a mistake on my part.
First, the bug in Google Music. It turns out that the songs didn't appear anywhere but the Tab. I couldn't find them in Google Music on my PC or any Android device except the Galaxy Tab (more on that later.) I looked at the Music Manager on my PC and it was stuck trying to upload the songs for this newly added album. They were stuck at 0% uploaded.
I'm in a conversation with the Google Music folks now trying to figure out why those songs won't upload. My next step is to send them a log and a database file.
Why do the songs appear on my Galaxy Tab? Well, that's my mistake. They are physically loaded on the tab. I had been experimenting copying files from my network shares using a network app and those were the files I copied. Google Music found them and included them in my list of music.
I recently got the Zune pass on my focus and I see it streams songs but it also has an option to download the track. The player looks just like the one that streams audio from internet explorer.
Would it be possible to have an option like that for all audio or at least make an app that can do the same? Or is there already something like this?
Sent from my Windows Phone
You've got to be more specific. What do you want to do?
Stream music and play it using the built-in Zune app (which is what IE does, not the other way around like you seem to think)? Lots of apps can do that.
Download music from the Zune store? No.
Download music from other sources, and play it using the Zune app controls? Same as answer one.
I know that I can stream music and play it with the Zune app, but I cannot download the song playing, meaning that every time I want to play it, I have to stream it. In other words, if I want the song stored on my phone, I have to go on a computer, download it, and sync it to my phone.
What I mean download music from the Zune store is that if you buy a Zune pass, you can download from the Zune store. Again, it is only the songs that Microsoft has made available.
So my question is, if I like a song on IE on my phone, is there any way for me to permanently save it to my phone?
What is the best to store music. I have double twist, but it is a pain to sync my checked songs in Itunes. I am coming from a iphone, had one since 08. I also uploaded most of my music I listen to to Google Music. Is that the easiest? I am afraid with double twist it will sync all of my music. Also will stock music app play songs that I have on Google Music?
Thank
I have DoubleTwist, but I only use it for AirPlay, not for syncing, so I can't speak on that part.
The Play Music (Google Music) player is the only player that will stream your Google Music from the cloud. However, within Play Music, you can download songs to your device. At that point you need a third-party app to convert the downloaded Google Music songs to regular mp3's for use with other apps like the stock app or DoubleTwist.
Sorry, I can't recall what any of these third-party apps are called, but if you google around, you should be able to find them.
If you want to keep music on your phone (which is of course handy for when you don't have a data connection), I use Syncr, which seems to have an easier interface, and less buggy than DoubleTwist. I just dump the music I want into playlists, and sync the playlists to my phone using Syncr.
Haven't used Doubletwist in a while. But when I did, it seemed that more times than not, it would try to synch all my music to my phone, regardless of the fact that I indicated to only sync certain playlists. Since I have something like 40+ GB of music, it lock up my computer, and fail to sync successfully anyway (since there is obviously not enough storage on the phone). Then I would have to start over synching, and on subsequent attempts, it would finally do what I wanted.
I find the solution I use to be quite useful and actually pretty awesome.
I've uploaded my entire music collection to Google Music. Yeah, it takes a while, but just leave your computer on for a couple of nights and it will finish.
Next, I made sure everything was well-organized. I only keep complete albums (like buying a CD), so sometimes there will be a song or two that need to be manually grouped into the album. Do this!
And finally, go into the Google Music app for your phone, select a few albums, and make them 'Available Offline'. It takes a minute or so to get an entire album transferred onto the device. Make sure you do this while on WiFi.
Since my phone can't hold all of my music, I select about 10 albums or so- more than I can realistically listen to while I'm out, and swap in/out albums when I get new ones or want to listen to something else.
It's also pretty useful if you stumble into anywhere with WiFi and want to listen to your entire music collection- something a lot of us cannot do even with 32GB phone storage. You can also make some more music 'Available Offline' when you find WiFi out in the wild.
This has worked wonders for me so far.
So does Google music not let others tie into their service? Big disappointment IMO, I am coming from windows phone and iPhone that have these app silos. Android has a file system and I thought this could be avoided.
I want to use the new HTC Music Hub and at first thought that it was going to tie-in from Google music and bring down all of my music as well as tie-in with local music I have on the phone. Which I am realizing is not the case. All the HTC Music Hub is going to do it let me launch Google music... Disappointing
New question though. Can Google Music two-way sync from the phone? Let's say I download an album from the internet onto my phone. If I put it in a certain folder will it sync? or is there an option in Google Music to upload music from the phone to Google Music?
And last but not least, can the Google Music player play music stored locally on the phone?
You can only add songs to Google Music from your computer, for now.
If you make music 'Available Offline', it becomes stored locally and you can listen to it without an internet connection.
You cannot use Google Music to listen to non-Goolge Music locally stored music.
danada said:
I find the solution I use to be quite useful and actually pretty awesome.
I've uploaded my entire music collection to Google Music. Yeah, it takes a while, but just leave your computer on for a couple of nights and it will finish.
Next, I made sure everything was well-organized. I only keep complete albums (like buying a CD), so sometimes there will be a song or two that need to be manually grouped into the album. Do this!
And finally, go into the Google Music app for your phone, select a few albums, and make them 'Available Offline'. It takes a minute or so to get an entire album transferred onto the device. Make sure you do this while on WiFi.
Since my phone can't hold all of my music, I select about 10 albums or so- more than I can realistically listen to while I'm out, and swap in/out albums when I get new ones or want to listen to something else.
It's also pretty useful if you stumble into anywhere with WiFi and want to listen to your entire music collection- something a lot of us cannot do even with 32GB phone storage. You can also make some more music 'Available Offline' when you find WiFi out in the wild.
This has worked wonders for me so far.
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Click to collapse
This is exactly what I'm thinking of doing if I get the One X. Some questions...
Is is simple to swap in/out albums for offline listening? (When on wi-fi.)
So the music is stored locally when downloaded for offline listening? For the One X would that mean the 'phone storage'? (The 9.8 available for media.)
Any idea how long it would take over wi-fi if I hypothetically chose 6 GB of music to download for offline listening?
How well organized is your music once you use the Google Music app? Any bugs? (Songs missing, artist listed twice, anything else.)
Thanks in advance for your answers.
I don't like the Google Play Music application much, so basically what I was wondering was if I could play kept google play music songs and albums in another player such as PowerAmp somehow. From what I have seen there is no way to do this because google incorporates some sort of DRM in all of their music files, which makes sense, because they don't want people just copying and pasting kept music files that they didn't actually buy. I have determined the location of the saved music files to be in "root\data\data\com.google.android.music\files\music" if I am in the wrong spot please let me know. I have pulled the saved music files (MP3's) from this location but can not manage to play them in any music player. I also tried running them through a converter just for the hell of it but the converter instantly crashes when I try converting the file. I don't think there is anything that can be done about this but if anybody has any ideas please let me know!
not possible. stop trying
I don't think you can get them from your phone but you can most definitely download the songs to your computer as regular mp3's. You can then put them on your phone and use any media player.
on a desktop/laptop, open google play music. pick what songs you want, then press download. the downloaded songs that you got using google play music desktop can now be played in other music applications.
Even still...if you have not purchased the song, you cannot download it. All of the music in "My Library" that you've uploaded can be dl'd but not songs you randomly hear and "Add to my Library"
Unless I'm doing something wrong....
You can not download music on a pc unless you have purchased that music. On the android application there is however and option to download music to the device in a hidden location (root\data\data\com.android.google.music\files\music). You can download them, but like I said they are encrypted or have some sort of DRM incorporation so you can not play them anywhere but within the play music application. I don't think it's possible. I just wanted a few opinions on it.
Hi Guys,
I'm from Brazil and I just bought a Nexus 5 to migrate from an old iPhone 3GS and I'm trying to sync all my iTunes Playlists to the new device, I saw that the Google Music Manager is the simplest way to do this but I can't access the Google Music page from my country. I tried to use a VPN service to enable it but needs a credit card to do the finish the process. Can any good soul download the executable and upload for me? Yes, I google it a lot and couldn't find...
Thanks a lot!
Google Music Manager is great for getting all of your music uploaded to Google Music, but if that's not available in your country it won't be much help to you. EDIT: By this I mean that even if you get the Music Manager to install and let you upload your music, you won't be able to get it back down to your phone.
I would use DoubleTwist
https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.doubleTwist.androidPlayer
DoubleTwist is a music player that has support for syncing with iTunes.
raptir said:
Google Music Manager is great for getting all of your music uploaded to Google Music, but if that's not available in your country it won't be much help to you. EDIT: By this I mean that even if you get the Music Manager to install and let you upload your music, you won't be able to get it back down to your phone.
I would use DoubleTwist
DoubleTwist is a music player that has support for syncing with iTunes.
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Click to collapse
So, are you saying that even if I downloaded the executable program to my PC, I was unable to sync my iTunes songs?
sidgabriel said:
So, are you saying that even if I downloaded the executable program to my PC, I was unable to sync my iTunes songs?
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Click to collapse
you could sync them to google music, but you wouldnt be able to use google music.
Zepius said:
you could sync them to google music, but you wouldnt be able to use google music.
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Click to collapse
That's that I want, only sync the songs to the phone, I'm not intended to use Google Music, I use another app to listen my musics.
sidgabriel said:
That's that I want, only sync the songs to the phone, I'm not intended to use Google Music, I use another app to listen my musics.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Right, that's not what the Google Music Manager is for. The Google Music Manager uploads songs to the Play Music service. You can then use the Play Music app on your phone to play back the songs. You can download the songs through the app as well, but they are saved in such a way that only the Play Music applications can play them (technically other players can play them, but the metadata is not saved so you can't actually view the song names or any artist/album info).
Just forget about the Music Manager, it's not what you want. Download DoubleTwist on your phone and computer and it will let you sync your iTunes library directly.
Thanks for the answer, I'm already using it.