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With your Apple Music subscription, you have access to thousands of high-quality music videos, ad-free, on your iPhone, iPad, Mac, and Apple TV. You can browse through videos from your favorite artists, or sit back and relax while watching curated video playlists from Apple's dedicated music team. Although just listening to your favorite music with your best noise-canceling headphones is a great way to experience Apple Music, music videos allow you to add a visual experience while you're listening. Here's how to watch music videos in Apple Music on your best iPhone, iPad, Mac, and Apple TV.
You can browse through Apple Music's Music Video page for something fun to watch, including curated video playlists for your favorite genres and decades.
You can scroll through new and featured music videos, playlists, and more. Find something you'd like to watch and click on it to start playing it. How to search for specific music videos in Apple MusicIf you know what you're looking for, you can easily find any music video available on Apple Music with a quick search.
If an artist or song you search for doesn't have a music video section, it's not available in Apple Music. How to add music videos to your Library in Apple MusicYou can add music videos found in Apple Music to your library so they're easier to find and watch at any time.
The music video will now be listed in your Library where you can stream it. If you want to download music videos for offline viewing, download it onto your iPhone, iPad, or Mac (you can't download anything on Apple TV, unfortunately). How to download music videos to your device in Apple MusicWhether you've already got a music video in your Library or you've just found it in Apple Music, you can download it to your iPhone, iPad, or Mac to watch offline. Build your perfect playlist and watch them all while out in the middle of nowhere.
The music video will download onto your iPhone, iPad, or Mac. Keep in mind how much storage space you have on your devices. Music videos take up around 50-100MB of space (as opposed to about 15MB for songs). How to view music videos added to your Library in Apple MusicYour Library is where your content sits. Whether it's music you ripped from your personal CD collection, bought on iTunes, or added from Apple Music (if it's from Apple Music, it doesn't belong to you. You are "borrowing it" with your subscription). When you want to find your music videos, you may have to filter iTunes or your Music app in order to see them.
If you don't see Music Videos, you may have to add it. On iPhone and iPad, tap Edit in the upper right corner of your Library. Then tap Music Videos to add it to the list.
Playlists aren't just for songs. You can create the perfect music video playlist and fill it with every video of your favorite artists doing the Floss (it'll happen eventually).
From now on, when you want to add a music video or song to your new playlist, it'll be there. On iPhone, iPad, and Mac, you can share a link to a music video on Twitter, Facebook, Messages, and a variety of different places using the Share extensions.
On Mac, you can copy the link, or share it directly on Twitter and Facebook. On iPhone and iPad, you can share it with a wide variety of services, including Facebook and Twitter, plus cloud-based storage services, Pinterest, chat apps, note-taking apps, and more. How to control video playback in Apple MusicFor the most part, controlling playback on a music video in Apple Music is the same as it is for any video. Tap or click on Play, pause, fast forward, and rewind. There are, however, a few additional ways you can control the playback of music videos in Apple Music that make it a little more fun. How to control video playback in Apple Music using SiriSiri on iPhone, iPad, Mac, and Apple TV knows what to do when you ask it to skip ahead, rewind, pause, and play a music video. Just ask.
Asking Siri to start playing a music video is a bit tricky. Sometimes, it plays an audio track instead, but sometimes it understands and plays the video you asked for. I wasn't ever able to successfully get Siri to play a music video on my Mac. All playback commands after the video starts work perfectly, though. How to control video playback in Apple Music using AirPodsIf you're watching music videos in Apple Music, you're AirPods can be used to control playback in the same way they would if you were listening to music. Depending on what you have assigned to your double-tap for the left and right ear, you can pause/play, skip to the next music video, play the previous music video, or double-tap to ask Siri to make your request. How to control video playback in Apple Music on Apple TV using HomePodIf you've got one or more HomePods hooked up to your Apple TV, you can, indeed, ask Siri on your HomePod to start playing a music video, pause, play, skip ahead, rewind, and more. Just ask Siri on your Homepod.
Again, asking Siri to start playing a music video is a bit tricky. Sometimes, it plays an audio track instead, but sometimes it understands and plays the video you asked for. All playback commands after the video starts work perfectly, though. Apple Music plansApple Music currently has three different plans; an individual subscription, a family subscription, which supports up to six people via Family Sharing, and the new, cheapest plan the Apple Music Voice Plan, which can only be used with Siri. All the plans give you access to the entire Apple Music song library, but the Apple Music Voice Plan does not let you watch music videos. If you want to watch a music video as described above in this guide, you'll need to switch plans. Updated March 2022: Updated for iOS 15 and macOS Monterey.
Luke is a senior writer at iMore and often describes himself as an "Apple user on a budget." When he isn't playing video games (Apple Arcade included), he's typically playing disc golf, taking photos, or fiddling with his favorite tech. Follow him at @LukeFilipowicz on Twitter.
Lory is a renaissance woman, writing news, reviews, and how-to guides for iMore. She also fancies herself a bit of a rock star in her town and spends too much time reading comic books. If she's not typing away at her keyboard, you can probably find her at Disneyland or watching Star Wars (or both). |