![]() ![]() I want all my “liked” tracks copied over too. I want all the albums I “liked” in Spotify to end up in the albums section of Apple Music. If my playlist has a description then I want to see that description in Apple Music. If a match isn’t great, I want a chance to fix it. That means all the right tracks, in the right order. ![]() This formed the basis of my test: if one tool copies Spotify objects over to Apple Music more accurately than another, I judge it better. Spoiler alert: none can ever give you 100/100 all the time because sometimes the right track just isn’t there to be found. So a tool which delivers all 100 is objectively “better” than a tool that only delivers 95. What’s not subjective is accuracy: if you’ve spent days creating a 100 track Spotify playlist for a special occasion, it’s safe to say you’re going to want to see the same 100 tracks in Apple Music after transferring. Me, all other things being equal, I’d prefer a tool that does it in 10 minutes. For example, you might love the idea of an involuntary digital detox as you plug your iPhone into a charger for an hour and a half while it chews through your playlists. To spare you from having to go through the same process I’m sharing what I learned. …I spent several hours trying these products out and I now know far more than I ever wanted.
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