By default, the app still runs Play Music, but you can swap to YouTube Music by using the app’s taskbar icon. I’m generally a Spotify user, but after a quick download I had the app up and running and it was working immediately with my keyboard’s media controls. On Windows 10, the client works brilliantly for me so far. Just like with Play Music, this native client runs the web client with native OS controls for play/pause, skipping tracks, and even certain tools like thumbs up/down ratings and more. With the 4.6.0 update released just yesterday, Attard has already implemented early functionality for YouTube Music within the app. The open source app has evolved over the years with Play Music itself, but now that Google is getting ready to shift all focus to YouTube Music, the app needed an update. Luckily, a third-party developer is coming to the rescue.ĭeveloper Samuel Attard debuted an unofficial desktop application for Google Play Music a while back (called “Google Play Music Desktop Player), and in the time since its launch, the app has picked up over 3,000,000 downloads. One thing it doesn’t fix, though, is the lack of a native app for desktop operating systems.
Google launched YouTube Music just a couple of weeks ago and it makes a lot of improvements to the company’s streaming strategy.