Fortunately, Spotify and Android make this task easy enough that anyone can make it work. And I'm going to show you just how to do it, so you can enjoy all the music you want, whether you're at your computer or not.

What you'll need: To make this work you'll need the Spotify app installed on your Android device (which you can do from the Google Play Store) and some music (MP3, MP4, or FLAC formats work great) to add.


How To Download Spotify Music To Your Phone


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The first thing you'll need to do is add music to your Android device. This is the only step that can be a bit tricky. How I do this is to upload the MP3, MP4, or FLAC files to a Music folder (I created) in Google Drive. Then, using the Google Drive app on Android, I download those files to my phone.

There are plenty of other ways to do this, but this is the easiest way I've found. Of course, if you purchase music on your phone (from sites like Amazon), as long as the music files are in your Android Download folder (you can check this using the Files app), you're good to go.

We're here to keep helping you. However, if you've already created a new account and everything works fine on it, you can follow the instructions in this Guide and transfer your music collection over to the new account.

I have an amazon echo dot set up at home, and a Spotify family premium account. The echo dot is linked to my spotify account, so when I am at home, using spotify on py phone will play through the echo dot if I wish. However, this means that when the echo dot is in use (by anyone) that I cannot use my phone at the same time to listen to seperate music. As an example, right now i am at work and listening to spotify, but my wife is at home and if she asks the echo dot to play something on spotify it will then disable me from listening to music on my phone. Is there a fix for this?

I just upgraded to family premium for this very reason. A family member starting music at home shouldn't stop my phone from playing. Pointless and annoying. I understand when it's a single account, but not family premium. I guess I need to assign one of the five accounts to each Echo. I hope Spotify plans to find a reasonable solution that doesn't require changing accounts all the time.

The feature you describe was on by default when I checked. I turned it off and restarted, then tried playing music to verify (no controls present on lock screen). Then I turned it back on and restarted the phone with the same result.


However, I noticed when I swiped on my lock screen in a different way, the voice recorder widget appeared (which was a separate issue or so I thought because it kept doing this randomly). From there I went into the Lock Screen > Widgets menu, and turned ON the "Music" widget. Previously I had assumed that this was for Samsung's internal music player app only, which could be why it was turned off. It also may have been turned off by default upon upgrading to Android 12.


Turning on this widget allowed the Spotify widget/notification with playback controls to appear on the lock screen when music is playing, and for a short time after pausing a track. I am not sure if this is correct functionality (which is why I am hesitant to mark this as a solution), but it seems to at least be a workaround for my issue.

There are other things we can check here. When Spotify is playing, swipe down from the top when your phone is unlocked > Swipe down again on the Spotify media controls and tap on Media Output > Press 3 dots in the top right > Settings > Make sure "Use while the phone is locked" is toggled on.

Tried the above proposed solution, but I don't see the Spotify media control on my unlocked phone (cf "swipe down from the top when your phone is unlocked > Swipe down again on the Spotify media controls and tap on Media Output")


If the issue persists, would you mind turning the Music widget option off, restarting your phone and turning it on again to see if it makes any difference? This will help us have a better look at the issue.

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.

2 years ago I had vivoactive , when I used spotify on my phone , I could control the music with my watch , I could the the name and skip song and all of this .

now I have venu qs music and I cant do non of this stuff , its just does not let me do it . How can I fix it ?

The only way for me to control spotify music from my phone with my watch is by changing music provider in the setting to phone . and if I want to use spotify on my watch I need to change it again to spotify in the setting

I actually dont know becuase I use only spotify for music so I have no idea , the only way to make it work is to change in the setting - music provider - phone . Then I can use it to skip music when im using spotify on my phone . If I want to use the skip and back for my watch spotify offline I need to go to setting - music provider - spotify 


IS THIS THE ONLY WAY ?

As you have mentioned, with Versa 2 you can only use the Spotify app to control the music playing in the Spotify on your phone or other Spotify Connect device. For more information, see How do I control music playing on Spotify?

Try to cast Spotify music from your phone to your Google Home Mini device. Does it sound distorted as well? Do a factory reset on your Google Home Mini device. It will set your device back to its default settings, so you need to do the setup again. Let me know how it goes.

If you don't have a cell-connected watch, you can side-load music from your phone (identify specific tracks/playlists to copy to the watch). You're limited to how many tracks you can transfer to the watch (if you have a large library, it may not fit entirely).

When you're working out, the last thing you want to do is stop to change your playlist. Galaxy Watches can control and play Spotify right from your wrist. All you need is a connected phone with a Spotify account. Now you can finish exercising without taking any breaks.


You can download and install Spotify onto your watch using the Galaxy Store or the Play Store, depending on your watch's model. With a Wear OS watch model, you can also instal Spotify directly onto your watch using the watch's PlayStore app. If it isn't already installed, you will also need to download and install the app onto your paired phone using the Play Store.

Wear OS Galaxy watches: Open Spotify on your watch. On the Log in screen, select the existing account that you logged into on your phone. If needed, you can tap Another account to get a code for your web browser or pair on phone.

Galaxy Watch, Galaxy Watch Active 1 and 2, Gear Sport, Gear S3 or Gear S2: Tap Log in to Stream Music after you open Spotify on the watch, and then tap Pair on Phone. You may be asked to log into your account on the phone again. Tap PAIR, and then your watch and phone will be paired. If you are a free user, tap Not Yet instead of Log In to Stream, and then tap Standalone.

On some watch models, like Wear OS models, you'll need to listen to the music through a paired Bluetooth device. On other models, like the Galaxy Watch 3, Galaxy Watch Active2, Galaxy Watch, and Gear S3, the music can also play through the watch's speaker. Or, connect some Galaxy Buds or another Bluetooth device and listen to your music using that!

If you feel like something is missing from your listening experience, though, Spotify lets you take control of various settings to make your music sound more superb. That way whether you're in a quiet library, on your morning commute or pumping some iron in the gym, your music will always fit the mood.

If you prefer being more hands-on with how your bass and treble come across in each song, you can adjust the in-app equalizer. Adjusting your bass affects lower-frequency sounds, making your music sound deeper with increased bass or flatter with less bass. Treble affects the higher sound frequencies, making your music sound brighter and crisper with increased treble, or duller and kind of muddied with less treble.

You can also adjust the audio quality of your music. This is handy if you're using mobile data and want to save money on your phone bill, as reducing the audio quality takes up less bandwidth and uses less data. Increasing the quality of your music should let you hear the finer details of the music and give you a clearer listening experience. ff782bc1db

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