What is the difference between itunes and apple music?
iTunes and Apple Music serve different roles for DJs, producers, and artists. iTunes is a digital store where you buy and permanently download tracks, albums, and other media. Once purchased, you own the files and can use them in your DJ sets, productions, or playlists without ongoing fees. Apple Music, on the other hand, is a subscription-based streaming service. You pay a monthly or annual fee to access a vast music catalog, but you do not own the tracks, you stream them, and offline access is tied to your active subscription. That makes the difference between future bass and melodic dubstep part of the same release decision, because the track needs to be clear for ownership, licensing and commercial use.
How does this impact music creators?
If you need to purchase and download tracks for DJ sets, remixing, or offline use in your DAW, iTunes is the better choice. Apple Music is ideal for discovering new music, referencing mixes, or building playlists, but its streaming rights do not allow you to use tracks commercially or outside the app. For ghost producers and artists, understanding these rights is crucial when preparing releases or demos for clients.
Key differences at a glance
- iTunes: Buy and own tracks, full offline access, use in DJ software and productions.
- Apple Music: Subscription streaming, no ownership, limited offline use, not for commercial DJ or production use.
Spotify offers a similar streaming model to Apple Music, but with its own licensing and catalog differences. For more on streaming platforms, see our guide to Spotify for producers.
Everything you need to know about Apple Music