iOS 9 finally makes Apple Music enjoyable and worth a listen

Since launching about three months ago, Apple Music hasn’t exactly provided a consistent and pleasurable user experience on iOS. While Apple Music really nailed music curation right out of the gate, overall usability on the app left a whole lot to be desired. As we highlighted on numerous occasions over the past few weeks, the initial incarnation of Apple Music was fraught with a number of frustrating bugs, with one of the more prominent issues being the inability to consistently add songs to a selected playlist.

Also problematic is that mobile performance was at times erratic. Often times, Apple Music would seemingly stall for minutes on end. Compounding matters is that some of the service’s more basic functions were hidden behind a rather unintuitive UI. Even worse, some functions — such as hopping from a song to the album it came from — seemingly worked just 30% of the time.

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As recently as early September, complaints surrounding Apple Music were still coming in fast and furious. In fact, the problems associated with Apple Music were so widespread that Apple took the rare step of actually admitting that “there’s a lot of work to be done” to address performance and usability issues.

Well thankfully, Apple with iOS 9 has already done quite a bit to address many of the aforementioned complaints. Over the past two and a half weeks, I’ve been using Apple Music quite a bit on iOS 9 and the experience has been surprisingly enjoyable. After months of frustration, I can gladly say that playlists on Apple Music are finally working. In fact, with Apple Music running on iOS 9, I can’t recall a single time where I added a song to a playlist and it didn’t show up instantly.

What’s more, the entire app appears to be a bit snappier. Now, songs play as quickly in succession as they do on Pandora and Spotify. Further, Apple has implemented a number of subtle, yet ultimately helpful, new UI tweaks that make perusing through the app much more enjoyable than ever before.

Timing wise, Apple Music’s emergence from what was arguably a ‘beta’ release couldn’t be more perfect. Not only does Apple Music reportedly have upwards of 15 million users, but there are undoubtedly many new iPhone 6s owners who are opting to take Apple Music for a spin. Notably, users who signed up for Apple Music when it launched will be seeing their free three-month trial period come to an end this week. If you’re not inclined to keep paying $10/month for Apple Music, make sure to turn off auto-pay by following these directions which we highlighted earlier this week:

If you’re on the fence about whether or not you should keep Apple Music, I think it’s worth giving it a spin, especially if you were one of the many early subscribers who found it to be endlessly frustrating. Overall, the service has improved by leaps and bounds since its initial release. Not only is the app no longer an exercise in frustration, it’s actually fun to use.

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This article was originally published on BGR.com