It's hard to describe the standard Android music playing experience,
as thanks to the amazing variety of skins and interfaces out there,
there isn't really one unified way that every Android user uses to play
and manages their tunes.
Yes, Google supplies a barebones music
player as part of the standard Android software, but phones with custom
user interfaces laid over the top of Google's code from the likes of
Motorola, Sony, HTC and most of the other makers, ignore this in favour
of offering their own customised players, completely changing the
player's look and feel in the process.
Some, like the music
player that comes pre-loaded in HTC's recent models like the One X and
One S, integrate lyric-finding services, internet streaming radio and
more, while Sony's been adding YouTube artist searches and social
sharing of track data to its Android models for years. So many phones,
all with wildly different MP3 playback options.
The best way to
unify your Android music player experience is therefore to use one of
the many standalone apps out there, all of which offer their own take on
how to best make your MP3 collection sing out of your phone.
Here are 10 of the best ways to get your mobile managing your tunes today.
1. N7Player
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2. Poweramp Music Player
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One of the most popular indie Android music players, thanks to combining a stylish design with stacks of graphic equaliser tools, crossfading, lyric display, Last.fm scrobbling, MP3 tag editing from the phone itself and much more. The trial version's free, but Poweramp is one you won't begrudge paying a couple of quid for.
3. Winamp
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Yes, the old PC desktop player lives on in Android form, with an incredibly feature-packed app for users of Google's mobile OS. Winamp supports iTunes importing, Shoutcast internet radio, plenty of new music discovery tools that include access to free new stuff, plus lock screen player controls, Last.fm scrobbling and more.
4. Cubed
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If you want something very different and a little bit odd, try this. The app, which we think is called Cubed, presents your music collection on, yes, the surface of a cube. Swiping left to right runs through your collection alphabetically, while paging up and down goes through all your albums. It downloads album art, scrobbles to Last.fm and is generally fun to fiddle with.
5. Last.fm
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6. Amazon MP3
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To call Amazon MP3 a music player is quite the understatement. As well as playing your legacy MP3 collection, this integrates with Amazon's cloud storage service, letting you sync your offline collection to the "cloud" for streaming through the app. You have to pay to upload lots of your own tracks, though, with the idea really being to encourage you to buy MP3s through Amazon -- which are free to store and stream through the app.
7. MixZing
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8. DoubleTwist Player
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DoubleTwist's one of the most comprehensive music apps available for Android, fitting in pretty much everything you might ever need. It syncs with PC, Mac and even iTunes playlists, manages podcast subscriptions, looks up missing album artwork and more. Some of it's free while other modules are unlocked via in-app purchases, but at least that means you get to give it a shot for free.
9. Holo Music Player
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The idea behind this one is to bring the "Holo" Android 4.0 visual style to all Android models, also offering loads of swipe-activated control features. In terms of music playing innovations there aren't many here, but you do get some smart Home screen widgets and lock screen controls. Plus it could convince someone you've got Android 4.0 on your old T-Mobile Pulse.
10. PlayerPro
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A properly hardcore option here. PlayerPro incorporates a very sexy graphic equaliser, lets you browse your tunes using a classic folder view, is completely skinnable if you don't like the default look of it and even lets you edit the tags of your audio files, should you like to while away long journeys obsessively naming MP3s files using the same structure. It also supports automatic album art downloads, to help jazz things up a little.
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