Skip to main content

BBC’s new music discovery tool will offer roving playlists

warner music group streaming
Garry Knight/Flickr

BBC has announced plans for new kind of streaming service that will make the 50,000 tracks it broadcasts each month easy to stream online. Similar to the storied broadcaster’s Playlister platform, the new service will offer curated playlists and other music discovery tools, while also linking with more traditional services — like Spotify, for instance — to source a wide collection of streaming music.

The BBC detailed the new service in its ‘British, Bold, Creative’ report.

“Through this digital music offer, we would reinvent our role as a trusted guide, in partnership with our audience and with the UK music industry,” said the report. “Together, the BBC and its audiences would curate music in new ways, enabling the discovery of more of all the music we play across the schedules of our many radio stations and TV channels.”

The BBC claims to run over 40,000 hours of music content yearly on its broadcasts. The new service is designed to push the local music scene — including lesser know acts — while capitalizing on the rising popularity of streaming.

“We would make this product a champion for new UK music, whether that is the latest unsigned talent from BBC Introducing or a classical performance of new music commissioned and broadcast by Radio 3,” explained the broadcaster. “We would also use it to increase our support for specialist genres, independent artists and labels—those who are less supported by the wider broadcast and digital market but for whom there are enthusiastic audiences.”

Alongside curated playlists, the new product will also feature recordings of “exclusive and unique live performances” from current programming like the acoustic Live Lounge and Radio 1’s music festival called Big Weekend. Past performers on these shows have included Coldplay, Katy Perry, Foo Fighters, Ellie Goulding, Ed Sheeran, and others.

The new service touts its ability to integrate with a variety of music streamers, as users will be able to “transfer playlists between digital music products, and access them after BBC availability has expired through third-party providers.” The broadcaster also notes that it plans to “license the product in a way that benefits artists fairly.”

BBC hasn’t set a release date for the proposed service, but notes that it may expand globally if it has success in the UK.

Editors' Recommendations

Chris Leo Palermino
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Chris Leo Palermino is a music, tech, business, and culture journalist based between New York and Boston. He also contributes…
Sonos says new product (probably headphones) coming by fall
Close up of Sonos logo on a Sonos Arc soundbar.

Sonos said today in its earnings call for the first quarter of its 2024 fiscal year that it will announce — and ship — a new product in a new category in the third quarter. While CEO Patrick Spence didn't shed anymore light as to what the new product will be, it's widely expected to be headphones.

Sonos' fiscal third quarter spans April through June. (A previous version of this story said July through September. We regret the error.) The company previously said the new product would land in the second (fiscal) half of the year, and today's announcement tightens that window to late summer.

Read more
What is Amazon Music: everything you need to know
Amazon Music

It's a jungle of music streaming platforms out there, so it stands to reason that Amazon would have one among its massive kingdom of services. And while Amazon Music might not be top of mind among the Spotifys and Apple Musics of the world, you might be surprised by its 100-million-song library, high-resolution and spatial audio offerings, podcast library, Alexa voice control, and a pretty amiable user interface that makes finding music pretty easy.

Amazon Music's subscriptions range from free to its premium Music Unlimited tier, which can be added for $10 per month on top of a subscription to Amazon Prime. But they all come with some quirks and features. We're going to break them all down for you to help you choose which, if any, Amazon Music plan is right for you.

Read more
Cambridge Audio hopes for another hit with its new CXN100 network streamer
The Cambridge Audio CXN100 Network Streamer.

Fans of Cambridge Audio's award-winning network music players are about to get a treat, as the British audio maker today launched its CXN100 Network Player, the long-awaited successor to its popular CXN V2. The redesigned player features a completely new DAC capable of handling 32-bit/768kHz, more precise and streamlined processing, built-in Wi-Fi and Bluetooth, and all new tuning by the company's "engineering magicians." The CXN100 goes on sale today for $1,099.

If you're not sure what a network streamer is or why you'd need one, it's basically one of the best ways to bring all of your digital music, streaming services, local music files, and even internet radio to your hi-fi component system at a very high level of quality. Cambridge Audio's new CXN100 builds on the success of the CXN V2, which Cambridge calls "the champion of network players," with what the company says is a "complete mechanical redesign."

Read more