Ready to experience the freedom of a wireless, phoneless, and practically weightless workout? If your smart watch has a built-in speaker, you can play music right from your watch. If it doesn't, don't worry! All you need to do is connect Bluetooth headphones. Simply add and remove tracks to build the perfect playlist! If you prefer streaming, you can do that too with a Spotify premium account. If you haven't gotten your devices already, you can visit our website to find the right Galaxy smart watch and earbud headphones for you.

Using the Galaxy Wearable app is the main way to export music to your watch. First, make sure the music you want to add is on your phone. Song files cannot be exported directly from a PC when the watch is connected to your Galaxy or Android phone. You can find the newest Galaxy phones on our website.


How To Download Music To Your Smartwatch


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You can select songs individually, or tap All in the upper left corner to select them all. Tap Done once you have the songs you want.

Note: You may be required to grant permissions when transferring music. You will receive a notification on the watch to grant them.

Library: Swipe up from the bottom of the screen to access your music library. On some watch models, you may have to tap the Library button to access it. Here you can view your tracks, artists, albums, and so on. This option may not appear if you do not have music files stored on the watch itself.

More options: Tap this to get additional controls for your music, such as Shuffle, Repeat, Favorites, and more. This option may not appear if you do not have music files stored on the watch itself.

With a Galaxy Fit or Fit2, you can use the Music Controller widget to control music playing from your phone. To access the widget, just press the Power or Home key on the watch, and then swipe left until you see it. You can adjust the volume of your music with the Galaxy Fit2 by swiping up twice on the widget, and then tapping + -.

If you are listening to a music app, such as Spotify, on your connected phone, the watch's music player will automatically switch to that app. However, you can change the app you want to control directly from the watch.

To do this, open the Music app on your watch. If you see a watch icon on the music player, tap it so you see a phone icon. Now tap More options (the three vertical dots), and then tap Music player. From here, you can scroll through your audio apps and tap the one you want to control.

You can listen to YouTube Music with your Wear OS watch. Enjoy music and podcasts anywhere using your watch, without needing to carry a mobile device with you. You can stream music over LTE or Wi-Fi, or you can download songs and podcasts to your watch so you can listen to music while offline. Leave your phone behind, and workout to your favorite songs with YouTube music on your wrist.

Tip: Turn on smart downloads to keep your watch automatically up-to-date with your favorite music. When you turn on smart downloads, your watch will automatically download music for you based on your YouTube Music listening history.

Especially when just running free and minimalist along the winding country roads of Devon with no worries. So this post assumes you are running without iPhone, just running with Apple Watch, no iPhone along for the ride, pure Apple Watch, your iPhone is back at home on a charger, bye bye iPhone, hello Apple Watch. It's the purest way.

For option 1 - syncing music to Apple Watch you don't need an Apple Music subscription, but you do need to have added your music to iTunes. So to be clear you can get MP3 files from anywhere, including ripping them from a CD or downloading from other services or strange Russian websites (not recommended), then add them to your iTunes library using your PC/Mac and sync them to Apple Watch.

If you are an Apple Music subscriber then you get all 40+ million tracks available to you and certain mixes (such as the Favorites Mix or "Heavy Rotation") are automatically synced to Apple Watch without you doing anything (though you can turn them off in the Apple Watch app on iPhone in Music settings if you want). As with non Apple Music subscribers, you still need to add the music you want from Apple Music to your library, then you can sync them to Apple Watch.

For streaming or using the Radio app (option 2) then yes, you need an Apple Music subscription, and an Apple Watch Series 3 LTE version with an active mobile data account, which makes sense. But for that you get "40 million songs on your wrist" at any time which is nice. Though don't expect batterly life to stand up more than 90 minutes of streaming.

Synced music on your Apple Watch is the most power efficient way of playing music but you do need some forethought unless you are happy with just the automatically added playlists. In reality I have added a few playlists and albums that I like and occasionally go in and add more, then forget about it. Things like "The A-List Blues" or "New Music" playlists are a dynamic ones from Apple so they change every week automatically, and when I am out running I get to hear new music without having to do anything - cool.

If you have an Apple Watch Series 3 with LTE, together with an Apple Music subscription then you can stream music directly from your watch, or play any Radio channel live directly from the watch. Battery life takes a hit for this though, so don't expect more than 90 minutes or so of constant streaming.

Or you can use Siri via Airpods or the Watch directly, and ask her to play something for you. In my original Everything you need to know about running with Apple Watch post I was quite critical of using Siri, but I have to say in recent months it seems to have improved a little, and I find myself using Siri more often to control playback of music while running than before. The hope is that the new v2 Airpods coming out this year will improve things further.

This isn't the developers fault, it is the way Apple have implemented music playback on Apple Watch. I am really hoping that there is an announcement at WWDC 2018 in June that fixes this one and for all, and means I can add podcasts to the list of of things I want synced to Apple Watch along with my music playlists and albumns. Fingers Crossed.

On Charge 6, use the YouTube Music controls app to control music playing in the YouTube Music app on your phone. Navigate between playlists, skip or replay songs, and adjust the volume from your tracker.

On certain Fitbit devices, use the Spotify app to control the music playing in the Spotify app on your phone, computer, or other Spotify Connect device. Navigate between playlists, like songs and switch between devices from your Fitbit device. To see which devices support the Spotify app, visit the Fitbit Gallery.

It sounds like you've adjusted the correct setting, but just to confirm, did you adjust this setting by following these steps? And if you check now, is the setting still off? Open the Apple Watch app on your iPhone and tap the My Watch tab. Tap General, then tap Wake Screen and turn off Auto-launch Audio Apps. This information is from here: Listen to music, podcasts, and audiobooks on your Apple Watch.

Thanks for reaching back out. Try unpairing and pairing the Apple Watch to the iPhone again. When you unpair, the data will be erased from your Apple Watch but a backup is also created when unpairing. You can still make a manual backup using these steps: Back up your Apple Watch

From this point you will be able to choose saved Playlists, Recently played, Made for You, Workouts, or Podcasts. If you have not previously used Spotify for your music proceed to step 3 to get some music set up to send to your watch.

Don't worry - it's quick and painless! Just click below, and once you're logged in we'll bring you right back here and post your question. We'll remember what you've already typed in so you won't have to do it again.

I went to the watch app and noted that the "Downloading..." message was still there. After a little while, I got the notification on the watch that streaming was available. Based on one of the suggestions in the main watch download/playback thread, I actually tried to get it to stream from the watch itself to my airpods. It had a hard time connecting to the airpods but eventually did so after I force quit the app on my phone. At that point, I noticed that the "Downloading..." message on the watch was gone -- it said something about adding music via the main app. I was able to download normally via the phone app after that.

@empeimaj2 I have tried that and when I click the watch logo in the spotify app on the watch, it just sits on loading and never actually connects. Did yours take a while? Or did it connect pretty quickly?

If you haven't tried any, then we suggest you head to this thread which is currently handling this issue. There you'll find some troubleshooting options and if the issue persists, you can add your +Vote and device info so we can pass it onto the relevant team.

Recently my Watch got an update. Since then the Watch has trouble showing the music player I use on my phone. I either use S2 or Youtubw Music. As I have seen Youtube Music is no problem, but S2 is a problem. Before the update the Watch never had problem showing S2 on the Watch, but now it's seldom happening. Does anyone know what the problem might be?

i have the same problem. No matter what i played on mobile, nothing happen on my watch 4 screen. i think it was happen after 2 recent updates. Before that, when i played video on youtube, music on spotify or YTmusic, my watch alway pop the media up and i can fully control on watch. Now it was just annoying, im using smart watch but still have to manually open media player on it ff782bc1db

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