Apple Music and TikTok have introduced a new music discovery feature called βPlay Full Songβ, with the music streaming serviceβs integration into the short-form video platform allowing users to listen to full-length tracks directly within the TikTok app. Suffice to say, this is one of the latest moves to keep users within the bounds of the app, for better or worse.
TikTok βPlay Full Songβ Feature

Essentially, if you found a song you like in one of the TikTok clips, tapping the song information will now allow you to listen through the entire song instead of a snippet β assuming youβre a paying Apple Music subscriber that is, since that is the requirement for this feature to work. Those users can then save it to βYour Musicβ section, and add the song into their Apple Music playlists for future listening; they can also continue listening to recommended tracks through a personalized Apple Music stream.
Prior to this, TikTok already have a semi-integrated approach in the form of βAdd to Music Appβ function, but this integration, which utilizes Appleβs MusicKit API, effectively reduces the βfrictionβ between both UIs. Like in a native app, this allows streams to be statistically counted within Apple Music (letβs just say K-Pop fans with competitive spirits are going to have a field day with this.) Of course, that also means the artists can get paid this way, too.
Besides that, both parties are also introducing a βListening Partyβ feature (a la Stationhead) that allows artists and fans to listen to music together in real time within a shared environment. Fans can participate in sessions hosted by artists, where they can listen to tracks simultaneously and interact during the session. TikTok says both features will roll out globally over the coming weeks.
Pokdepinion: Sounds like a win-win for both.
