![]() ![]() We are hoping that Google notifies you that your time has come, because once you lose access to Google Play Music, you will have a “minimum of 30 days after losing access to Google Play Music to complete your transfer” to YouTube Music. There’s really no telling when your number will be called once that process begins, so you’ll want to move everything over soon. This will happen on an “ongoing basis” up until December, when the whole service shuts down. Google says that users in New Zealand and South Africa will first lose access next month and that the rest of the global shutdown will start in October. ![]() Once September rolls around, we’ll start to see the official shutdown of Play Music begin. Music purchases, they are indeed no longer a part of Google Play and the end of Music Manager means they don’t want you continuing to build your libraries on a dying service. Even if you have a pre-order of an album that’s for a later date, Google will cancel that and refund you. Starting this month (August), Google will kill off music purchases through Google Play and also turn off your ability to upload music through the Music Manager. Today, we were told the exact time frame for Google Play Music’s demise and how quickly you need to start sorting this out before you lose all of your Play Music collection. In May of this year, we learned that Google Play Music wouldn’t make it out of 2020 and that the transition from it to YouTube Music was finally happening. ![]()
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