How to Find Apple Music on Your Phone, Mac, or PC

By now you’ve probably heard of Apple Music, the all-new $10 a month music-streaming service brought to you by the folks who invented iTunes and the iPhone.

You may have even downloaded the Apple Music app to your phone or your computer. And now you’re probably wondering, Where the #%!&#! is it?

For a service as heavily hyped as this one, Apple has been doing a fantastic job of hiding it. Here’s where to look for it.

Find it online

First, of course, you have to get Apple Music. Don’t bother looking for it in the mobile App Store, you won’t find it there.

For iPhones, iPads, and iPod Touch, Apple Music is part of an upgrade to its mobile operating system: iOS 8.4. Download and install that, and you’ll have Apple Music.

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Related: Here’s How to Get Apple Music on Your iPhone or iPad

If you’re longing to stream music directly to your Mac or PC, you need to download a new version of iTunes—12.2, to be precise. (That desktop update wasn’t available for many users until 8 or 9 hours after the mobile version was released—causing all kinds of teeth-gnashing in Apple’s support forums, as well as among certain tech journalists who shall remain unnamed.)

There are two ways to get the desktop version. You can download iTunes 12.2 from the Web here, and then double click the file to update your current copy of iTunes.

On the Mac, you can launch the App Store app and click Updates at the top of the screen. At the next screen, click the Update button for iTunes 12.2. (If your Mac has more than one piece of software that needs updating, you could instead click Update All at the top of the panel.)

Find it on your machine

Now that you have Apple Music, where the heck did it go?

On your iPhone, it’ll simply replace your old Music app (wherever you were keeping that).

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Apple Music, hiding in plain sight on an iPhone 6.

Tap that new icon, and you’ll have the option of signing up for Apple Music. (The first three months are free, then Apple will bill you $10 a month until you cancel). If you choose not to sign up, you’ll still have access to any music you’ve stored on your phone or tablet, as well as the ability to stream the free Beats 1 radio station and join Apple Connect, the social media portion of the new streaming service.

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On the desktop, you simply need to launch iTunes. It should load with Apple Music front and center, prompting you (again) to sign up for a free three-month trial. Click Yes, and it will sync with the account on your phone—so you won’t get billed twice—though it may quiz you about your musical preferences again using those silly bubbles.

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And that’s it. You’re now free to enjoy 30 million+ songs on your machines at any time—provided your data plan is up to the task.

Read more about Apple Music at Yahoo Tech:

Apple Music is Hot – and Messy

Will Apple Music Kill Your Data Plan?

What is Apple Music and Why You Should Care

6 Reasons to Love Apple Music, 6 Reasons to Hate It