Shazam Ipad
Shazam is now a part of the Apple Music family!
People use Shazam to listen to songs for the purpose of identifying what song is playing. Shazams are recorded anytime your song is recognized by the Shazam app or one of the partner apps that use Shazam technology. Shazam data is currently available in Apple Music for Artists, throughout the web and app experience.
Shazam Data
If your song is shazamed, you'll find Shazam data incorporated throughout your Apple Music for Artists profile. In the Overview section, quickly view key metrics such as Shazam Insights and Top Shazams.
Shazam Pandora
Apple-owned Shazam is the most popular music-identification service in the world. Starting with iOS 14.2, your iPhone, iPad and iPod touch can identify music playing around you or in apps via Shazam-powered music recognition available from the Control Center. Shazam’s new iPad app is one of a growing number of apps and devices that always keep the microphone running in order to react to speech, or in this case music; others include the new Xbox One. It’s a concept that will make some privacy-conscious consumers nervous — but Jones said that there are huge upsides to this approach.
Trends will allow you to dig deeper in to your data and see detailed demographics about the listeners who shazamed your track, while Places will show your top shazamed countries and regions around the world. If you want to view all of your data for all of your music in one place, go to the Your Music section of your profile.
Charting on Shazam
When you have a top Shazam track in a country or city, your track will appear in a Shazam chart. Charting on Shazam will display your track’s position and movement on the chart in a given country, region, or city in the last seven days.
Select a specific song to see every country and city chart the track appears on. To see the Top Charts for your Top Songs, click See All in the Charting on Shazam section of Overview or Your Music.
Chart data updates every 24 hours. If your track has not been included in a Shazam chart, you will not see this section displayed in your profile.
Trending on Shazam
If your music is trending on Shazam, we'll send you a weekly Trending on Shazam email to highlight your top Shazam trends. Get a quick snapshot of which of your songs are On Fire, On the Rise, or Reacting. For more detailed information about this email, review Communication Preferences.
When does a Shazam count toward my songs?
Whenever a Shazam has been recorded for one of your songs, you will see it counted as a Shazam in your Apple Music for Artists profile.
Because Shazam listens to a portion of audio from a song in order to recognize it, there may be times when the portion of audio being listened to happens to be identical to a portion of audio from a different version of the same song. For example, an original version of a song and a remix version of that same song, often include some portions of audio that are exactly the same. In these cases, the Shazam will count toward the version of your song that is determined to be the best match, which is why you may see variations in the number of Shazams across different versions of the same tracks.
We process the Shazam data shown in Apple Music for Artists and the Shazam app on different systems and schedules. For this reason, you may see a difference in the Shazams shown on the Apple Music for Artists dashboard when compared to the Shazam app.
Christian Zibreg, iDownloadMac:
Apple-owned Shazam is the most popular music-identification service in the world. Starting with iOS 14.2, your iPhone, iPad and iPod touch can identify music playing around you or in apps via Shazam-powered music recognition available from the Control Center.
In a nutshell, if you’ve got the iOS or iPadOS 14.2 beta installed:
Shazam Ipad 2
- Go to Settings > Control Center
- Tap the green + to add Music Recognition to Included Controls
Do that, and you’ll see the Shazam icon in Control Center. Tap it, it’ll do its thing.
Me, I ask Siri:
Shazam Ipad Cover
“What song is this?”
Both seem to work equally well. I’m guessing they fire up the same exact bit of code. The Control Center approach is much more subtle if you’re in a room with others. Good to have both.