Apple Music on iOS 26


I uploaded iOS 26 Beta on my iPhone 16 Pro Max yesterday. Along with my iPad I use this phone in conjunction with the EverSolo DMP-A6 Signature Edition (as streamer) feeding the digital signal via USB or Coax to an Auralic Vega DAC or Denafrips Pontus DAC. My hi-fi is transparent enough to allow me to experience subtle (or not so subtle) changes in associated upstream-downstream hardware and the music streaming service sound quality easily. As standard, I use both Qobuz and Apple Music streaming services. To date, I have found the sound quality of Qobuz to be, in general, a bit higher than Apple Music. I have two choices to stream either service, first is using EverSolo’s Control app therefore engaging EverSolo’s unique sample bit-rate algorithm. The iPhone / iPad has the EverSolo Control app which serves as the music selection interface, then signaling the streamer to retrieve the music from Cloud-based servers via Ethernet. Again, note that with this method everything is selected and controlled via EverSolo’s app.

The second alternative is to search and select via the Qobuz app or Apple Music app directly, then select sound out using wi-fi to connect to DMP-A6 streamer. 
 

I am greatly impressed with the evolved Apple Music streamer experience. Most important to me is that sound quality seems to my ears clearly better, or I should more correctly say, more musically engaging. The sound is subjectively bigger and soundstage more layered with greater separation (less homogeneous sound presentation) or as they say, more fully fleshed out. Dynamics are better. Overall a major step forward for Apple Music in my book. Important to note the sound I describe is only to be had by accessing music direct from the native music streaming app on mobile device, and not through EverSolo Control app. I am confident that this will be duplicated by the EverSolo team in a future software and firmware upgrade.

Why does it sound better? Not sure, but it could have something to do with a more universal adaptation of the Spatial Sound technology? What I can say is that it sounds better streaming Apple Music  in my hi-if system now.

in addition to sound improvement another very compelling feature is the Dj-like mixing of one song into another. Just brilliant! So engaging. 

 

Anyone else had a chance to try this out?

 

By the way, huge appreciation for the EverSolo DMP-A6 Signature Streamer / DAC. It is superb both as a streamer and a DAC.

Peace, out.
Aki

4afsanakhan

@jetter That is a very fair point, and I neglected to mention this could’ve been a conscientious, and maybe even a smart, business decision on Apple’s part, but as an audiophile it doesn’t mean I have to like it.  It’s like their headphones — they’re fun and functional but not geared toward high-end audio consumers.  I guess we audiophiles need to realize the world doesn’t revolve around us, although it certainly should. 😝

I don’t think that the music streaming market is a lucrative business in general ...

It isn’t. Spotify’s profits have been, uh, spotty. Qobuz (Xandrie SA) hasn’t earned a profit. Tidal is privately owned so it’s difficult to tell for certain, but its series of staff cutbacks suggest it isn’t profitable, either. 

From internet search confirmed by What HiFi: ‘Apple Music offers lossless audio through its subscription service, allowing access to millions of tracks encoded using Apple Lossless Audio Codec (ALAC) in various resolutions. Users can choose between standard lossless (up to 24-bit/48 kHz) and hi-res lossless (up to 24-bit/192 kHz) audio quality.’

To confirm, wi-fi streaming of Apple Music also offers up 24bit/192khz.

Apple also offers a silo’d service as part of Apple Music dedicated to Classical music. It would be interesting to compare catalogues of each service to determine per genre how extensive the choice of albums / music releases is. 

I used the Apple Classical service.  I recently added Qobuz.  I will say that at least in this genre Apple catalog and search engine blow Qobuz away; in the one month I have probably discovered a dozen albums available on Apple that aren’t on Qobuz