Rhapsody 3.0 for Windows Phone 8

Yet another competitor to Xbox Music on Windows Phone 8

Windows Phone 8-toting music lovers now have another excellent music service to consider: Rhapsody 3.0 delivers streaming and offline access to Rhapsody’s 16 million track collection. The release follows in the footsteps of Spotify Beta for Windows Phone 8, which is somewhat similar, Xbox Music, which is of course a mess, and Nokia Music+ Beta, which is limited to Lumia devices.

Rhapsody 3.0 for Windows Phone 8 is now available for download from the Windows Phone Store. The app is free, but it of course requires a paid subscription. (A free 14-day trial is available for new customers.) Prices are in-line with competing services: For access on one mobile device, it costs $9.99 a month, $27.99 a quarter, or $109.99 per year. (There’s also a three device version that costs $14.99 per month, $39.99 per quarter, or $144.99 per year.)

So what’s Rhapsody?

It’s an online music service, of course, with an Internet radio component, a gigantic music library, no advertising, streaming and downloading support for offline access to your music, and artist-based playlists. It supports Mac, PC, iOS, Android, Blackberry, Xbox 360, TiVo, various smart PCs, and even some cars (including Ford vehicles with SYNC AppLink). And now it’s fully supported on Windows Phone 8 as well.

Here’s a YouTube video that explains the service. (Check out Rhapsody's YouTube channel for more.)

The just-released Rhapsody app for Windows Phone 8 includes the following features:

Offline mode. Listen to downloaded playlists, albums and songs without a connection

Do more with My Music. View your music library save artists, albums and tracks to My Music, and access My Music from any Rhapsody-supported device

New releases. Be the first to hear new releases from your favorite artists. 

Find new music. Explore any genre in depth with stations, new releases and top tracks.

What’s popular. See what’s popular on Rhapsody.

Radio. Relax with Rhapsody radio. Pick from artist, genre, or theme-based stations. No ads! 

Playlists. Build playlists on Rhapsody.com and they will automatically appear on your Windows Phone.

As immersed as I am in Xbox Music right now, it’s not hard to see how these features map to what Microsoft promises (and in some cases delivers) with Xbox Music and Xbox Music Pass. And given the sorry state of Xbox Music, this service certainly appears enticing. I’m away this week, but I’ll check out Rhapsody when I get home. That it works with my primary platforms—Windows, Windows Phone, Xbox—is obviously a huge plus. I suspect it may be for you as well.

Discuss this Article 7

jsminch
on Feb 17, 2013

As long as it's not absolute and utter crap it has Xbox Music beat by a mile.

--JSMinch, long time Zune user and MS fanboi who made the mistake of buying a WP8 phone and expecting it to work with our Zune account and Windows 8. Silly me.

rjprice
on Feb 17, 2013

Hopefully Apple will release an iTunes app soon for Windows Phone and Windows 8/RT so Microsoft customers outside the US can have a viable online/digital media solution.

Trappist
on Feb 18, 2013

iTunes on Windows is such a horrible piece of software that hopefully it shall never taint WP. Only the Zune software for WP 7 is worse.

rjprice
on Feb 18, 2013

No question, iTunes was terrible on Windows for years, especially the 64 bit versions for Vista. By Win7 Apple had at least got iTunes stable and reliable, if still pretty klunky to use. But it wasn't much better on the Mac either. Using iTunes on either platform required an advanced degree in geology to work through the layers of sediment built up over the years.

I quite like iTunes 11 though, on both my Mac and PC. Apple has really cleaned up the main UI and the aesthetic changes almost feel more at home on Win8 than on Mountain Lion. Underneath iTunes is still basically just a 90s era dBase application but once you get through the initial configuration and preference settings it at least looks and feels reasonably up to date.

I suspect any discussion of iTunes on Windows Phone or even a Metro iTunes for Win8/RT is academic though. Microsoft has to know their immature and frustrating X-Box media ecosystem would be dead by dinner time the day they let Apple play in the walled garden of Metro. I just don't see an iTunes app forthcoming. But we need something better than the mess Microsoft has foisted on us. And Microsoft needs it more than we do. We can survive with out the X-Box media ecosystem but Microsoft is going to have a very tough time in the device market if nobody wants to use their media apps and ecosystem, which is the situation now. The device market is fickle and expects instant gratification. If Microsoft cannot deliver an acceptable solution ASAP they will lose that market forever.

FWIW, I kind of like the Zune media software on my Mango phone. It isn't fancy but it is better than anything I've found for Android. I have not seen or used a WP8 handset and fear that Microsoft wrecked the media experience on the phone the way they did on the desktop is the main reason I am scared to even look at one. I just don't want another disappointment.

On the other hand, I know how bad the PC Windows 8 X-Box music app is and I still ordered a Win8 tablet. I'm hoping it will work a little better on a small touch screen than it does mousing all over hectares of desert wasteland on a 24" monitor.

James-SantaBarbara
on Feb 22, 2013

Thank goodness iTunes 11.0.2 for Windows (64-bit) is now available. It wasn't available 3-5 weeks ago but this new version runs on Windows 8.

There are ways to get iTunes installed in a minimalist fashion (Ed Bott @ ZDnet) and if you turn off all unwanted features, etc. it runs pretty well on Windows. And it gives you a good interface to edit metadata and is a decent music player.

Xbox Music is barely passable in my opinion. It certainly is a step down from iTunes and Zune. I was using VLC to manage my music and edit metadata but it is not a great player.

Xbox Music (to which I subscribe) is Metro only and is so kludgy for most uses and some functions fail to work sometimes (Smart DJ fails to sync half the time, etc.). It is almost a useless piece of software but I wanted to give it a try; but Microsoft better get those (skilled?) engineers busy and start making world class apps or they are going to fall into a failure cavern again with less than useful consumer oriented software ventures...again.

Most of the Metro apps I've tried and used are not worth using and the few that are worthwhile have so many deficiencies compared to desktop software that they leave me cold.

In theory Metro apps are a good idea...in practice they pretty much suck for now.

multiplatform
on Feb 17, 2013

Note for Mac OS users: there is no native client application for Rhapsody...web interface only.

SvenJ
on Feb 19, 2013

Quit dissin' Zune. It is a very nice interface on Windows, was a darned good media player and the client for WP7 was easy and integrated well. Why, oh why, did they have to dork it up. Could have just renamed it XBox Music, instead of starting a new music client from scratch, ignoring the features of Zune we had become accustomed to.

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