A single HTTP response originates from an endpoint URL. The Device API root endpoint URL (domain) is -api.amazon.com/. To protect customers and partners, only HTTPS connections supporting TLS 1.2 or higher are permitted between this domain and client devices. Other Amazon subdomains may be used to serve some specific content, but the overall functionality and user experience are determined by GET requests to and responses from this root endpoint.

DRM primarily relies on encryption. Amazon Music's content streams are encrypted and cannot be played without being decrypted. To playback content, clients must send a license request to a license server. If the request is valid, the server will send back a license key. The license allows the client's media player to decrypt the content and play it.


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Amazon Music offers a wide variety of music formats. In addition to standard audio, some songs in the Amazon Music catalog are available in high-definition lossless formats and even in spatial audio formats. Please note that not every audio track is available in all formats.

HD and UHD representations are encoded with the FLAC audio codec. The spatial audio codecs are Dolby Atmos and Sony 360 RA. The manifest containing HD, UHD, and spatial audio will also refer to standard quality representations using the OPUS codec to allow players to fall back to a lower bandwidth variant if current network conditions cannot sustain high-definition streams.

The device must parse the pssh and LicenseUrl from the manifest to create a license challenge. This license challenge will be used to retrieve the key. An example of the function call the media player should make to the CDN is createLicenseChallenge(pssh).

To simulate license expiration for testing, the player will set the expiration header, x-amz-music-license-expiration-secs, when requesting the license. The value of this header would indicate the time in seconds after which the returned license will expire. When the license server receives a license request with this header, the license server will return a license that will expire after the duration set in the header.

For devices using a modern version of Android or running in a Chromium-based browser, an L3 CDM is pre-installed. Pre-built Widevine CDMs are available for many other media players as well. For these players, partners can download the compatible Widevine library and compile the player with it. Devices with built-in Widevine L1 functionality also already have a CDM.

In rare cases where a Widevine CDM does not already exist for a platform or device, Widevine will work with licensees to build compatible binaries. The steps to build integration into a media player are available in documentation available from Widevine.

Unfortunately, Alexa can't do this right now. This is somewhat disadvantageous, especially if you have had Alexa shuffle music from a favorite artist, and you want to go back to a song you hadn't heard before. What was its name? If you weren't near the screen, or listening through a dot or echo, you can't get back to it easily.

Also, refering to the original post comment, I don't see where the music history is on the Amazon Music App either. There is no "recently played" on that app, or a "tree" to follow to hunt for the history that I could find...there is however, a "recents" to tap, but it just says I don't have any purchased music. I am listening to a Pandora station on my Alexa dot, so perhaps this does not pertain.

Recently Played Music List (playlist or similar song lists: To find it, you select (expand) the Currently Playing page, which by default is a collapsed toolbar at the bottom of the current page in the mobile app. In the collapsed view it shows (on the left) the current music playing, the "group" or device playing it, and a play/pause and Volume/Mute option. Click to expand it to full page.

The full page view of Currently Playing shows album art, play controls, and at the bottom line on the left is an icon which resembles a paragraph (read: list) with an arrow inset (read: playlist). Click it, you get the music history. From this playlist view you can select an item to play it again, .

Choosing the Play icon brings you to a Music & Books "home page", again a resource that was more obviously in the original application top-level menu options. Selecting the Play icon to get to here, and it provides a variety of ways to select music or reader content.

The full page view shows current song album art and play controls, and at the bottom left is an icon that looks like a list. Click it, you get the music history. From this playlist view you can select an item to play it again." Yes! It worked.

@dh706 that used to work, but now all I get is a blank screen with a back button in the upper left. I am using Apple Music as my music source and on an iPad with iOS 15, so perhaps that has some bearing on the issue.

Same here. Bought something on Amazon yesterday, and it didn't automatically download to my Samsung music app on my phone per usual. I've been looking for answers everywhere. Glad to see I'm not alone. Bookmarking hoping for some answer. Help!

Only luck I've had is to download Amazon music app to my laptop. Download the music from the app to the laptop. Plug my phone into the laptop and after MANY attempts of trial and error find the folder where the Amazon Music is stored and try to get it to copy over to my SD card. This is a MAJOR pain in the . I have been working on this since I made this post. I ordered The Essential Judas Priest album and it did not download from Amazon right to my SD card like the settings says it does. I can NOT find the downloaded music ANYWHERE on my phone. They only way I found was to do it with the instructions above. Good luck, it's very frustrating. And Amazon is going to lose a lot of money because I'm not going to order single songs or albums from them if I have to go through ALL this work to get the music on to my phone.

Agree, I'm done purchasing music from Amazon unless/until this gets resolved. I too was able to download the music onto my computer -- Microsoft Surface (Groove music app) -- but I have not gone through the steps of moving the file(s) to my phone.

I just tried this, and it didn't work for me. It doesn't appear that my Amazon mp3's are downloading at all into my Samsung Galaxy S10e phone, since I can't find the files anywhere in my phone's internal storage. The files seem to only "download" into the Amazon music app's download directory.

While you can't play streaming music from other services using the Music app, if you own the music files and they are downloaded on a computer then you can sync these to the iPhone and play them with the Music app. Here's how to do this: Use iTunes to sync your iPhone, iPad, or iPod with your computer - Apple Support. This does not require a subscription service.

You wanted more information about syncing. Syncing would have been helpful in the case where you have downloaded the music files to the computer. If you had the physical files on the computer, you could sync them to the iPhone. You can do this with a PC computer, as an Apple computer is not necessary for the syncing process.

The iPod Touch was the last dedicated music player in Apple's lineup, but it was officially discontinued in May 2022. You can still find used models out there, but don't expect them to be supported for much longer. 

What to do instead? Get a used iPhone, or a new iPhone SE -- and just use it on Wi-Fi. The latter will cost you $429 (for 64GB of storage), but you'll get a device that can run the latest version of iOS, and it can pull music from iTunes (on Windows) or Apple Music (on the Mac). It works seamlessly with Bluetooth headphones and speakers, but you'll need a pesky Lightning adapter to use old-school headphones. And, because it's got the App Store, you can also opt for alternate services like Spotify, Amazon Music, YouTube and the like (so long as you can access a Wi-Fi hotspot), in addition to or instead of the Apple Music app. 

You can get refurbished models for less than $200, though this is still way too much to pay for a "music player," in my book. But it's the most capable and flexible option here, especially for those who are already in the Apple services universe -- or refuse to leave their iTunes-based MP3 library. It's also a nice fallback portable MP3 player option for kids if you don't want an iPad, which starts at around $300 but isn't pocketable.

The iPod Touch was the last dedicated music player in Apple's lineup, but it was officially discontinued in May 2022. You can still find used models out there, but don't expect them to be supported for much longer.

What to do instead? Get a used iPhone, or a new iPhone SE -- and just use it on Wi-Fi. The latter will cost you $429 (for 64GB of storage), but you'll get a device that can run the latest version of iOS, and it can pull music from iTunes (on Windows) or Apple Music (on the Mac). It works seamlessly with Bluetooth headphones and speakers, but you'll need a pesky Lightning adapter to use old-school headphones. And, because it's got the App Store, you can also opt for alternate services like Spotify, Amazon Music, YouTube and the like (so long as you can access a Wi-Fi hotspot), in addition to or instead of the Apple Music app.

Nowadays the real Apple Watch can act as a sorta-kinda iPod, at least for Apple Music subscribers. Just sync some playlists to the Watch, and you can enjoy digital music (not to mention podcasts) on a set of wireless headphones, even if the iPhone is nowhere nearby. Get an Apple Watch SE for less than $250 for basic music playback, or go for an Apple Watch Series 8 or Apple Watch Ultra if you want more nonmusic features. Note that recent Apple Watch SE sales have seen the prices of the 40mm version drop to as low as $200 and the larger 44mm model dip below $230.  ff782bc1db

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