Spotify rolls out a huge Wear OS upgrade including new album art and handy tap gestures, giving you ‘even more control from your wrist’ | Tech Radar
Overview
Spotify rolls out a huge Wear OS upgrade including new album art and handy tap gestures, giving you ‘even more control from your wrist’
When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission. Here’s how it works.
Details
As well as new visual elements, you can now use tap gestures to play and skip songs
It's available to all Wear OS-compatible devices, so long as you update the Spotify app in the Play Store
Are you a Wear OS user and a Spotify subscriber? Your on-wrist experience is about to get better thanks to a major upgrade coming to some of the best smartwatches — which includes a new graphic redesign and handy tap gestures.
If you’re a power-user of a Samsung Galaxy Watch or Google Pixel Watch, you’ll now have access to the new Spotify experience for Wear OS so long as you’ve installed the latest version of the Spotify app via the Play Store. In an email sent to Tech Radar, Spotify details that the new wave of Wear OS features are “redesigned to be more intuitive, more discoverable” bringing “the best of Spotify to your watch”. So, what’s new?
First off, Spotify’s Wear OS revamp puts visual aesthetics at the forefront of its new ‘Now Playing’ screen, which displays creator art behind the current playing song as well as the playback controls. You can also view and amend your music queue from this view and control audio output too. When you swipe from top to bottom, it takes you to a new ‘immersive view’, where the creator art is displayed in its entirety without the obstruction of the pause and play icons.
Spotify rolls out handy Smart Reorder tool for Mixed playlists
Apple Music has a slew of new features on the way, including a revamped UI
3 Wear OS features you're probably not using, but should be
When you swipe up on the ‘Now Playing’ screen it takes you to Spotify's main Home page, where your Liked Songs, Downloads, recently accessed playlists, podcasts, artists, and more will be front and center. That said, one of the more handy tools is the search function allowing you to look up a song to add to your queue, bringing music discovery features to your wrist.
However, the new update isn’t just about how pretty it looks, it also has a slew of practical new tools. Now you can manually use your finger to pause, play, and skip through songs on your watch face, as well as use tap gestures to control the playback. One tap will pause and play music for you, while two taps will skip from one song to the next.
I’m an Apple Watch user, and I’m envious of this upgrade
The best part about Spotify’s smartwatch app is that it takes all the best features from the mobile experience and puts them right on your wrist, providing a convenient way to control your music playback when you’re working out or have your hands tied.
Spotify’s Apple Watch experience isn’t dissimilar to its new Wear OS update. You can still amend your music queue, search for songs, and access your full Library of saved artists, albums, and recently streamed playlists — but it’s certainly not as pretty.
Apple Watch users miss out on the album art feature, a tool that makes the new Wear OS Spotify experience so bold and visually engaging. Instead, the ‘Now Playing’ page on Apple Watch just displays the song title and artist, with pause, play, skip, and queue icons against a plain black background. It’s far too simple for my liking and, dare I say, slightly dull.
However, Spotify for Apple Watch does replicate the Home tab and Your Library from the mobile experience, so at least you don’t have to navigate an interface that feels completely different. That said, I do hope that Spotify gives its watch OS version a bit of TLC in the near future — it should at least emulate the Liquid Glass aesthetic that Apple has been pushing for almost a year.
Follow Tech Radar on Google News and add us as a preferred source to get our expert news, reviews, and opinion in your feeds. Make sure to click the Follow button!
And of course, you can also follow Tech Radar on You Tube and Tik Tok for news, reviews, unboxings in video form, and get regular updates from us on Whats App too
Rowan is an Editorial Associate and Apprentice Writer for Tech Radar. A recent addition to the news team, he is involved in generating stories for topics that spread across Tech Radar's categories. His interests in audio tech and knowledge in entertainment culture help bring the latest updates in tech news to our readers.
You must confirm your public display name before commenting
1 Meta is pulling the plug on its VR metaverse in June
2 Microsoft is mixing up its Copilot AI leadership, so Suleyman can 'build enterprise tuned lineages'
3 Express VPN uncovers 3.7 million items of leaked AI chatbot data
4I asked Chat GPT what to watch across 6 streaming apps — and it nailed it
5 The Madison cast say this Robert Redford film is unmissable — stream it here
Tech Radar is part of Future US Inc, an international media group and leading digital publisher. Visit our corporate site.
© Future US, Inc. Full 7th Floor, 130 West 42nd Street, New York, NY 10036.
Key Takeaways
-
Spotify rolls out a huge Wear OS upgrade including new album art and handy tap gestures, giving you ‘even more control from your wrist’
-
When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission
-
As well as new visual elements, you can now use tap gestures to play and skip songs
-
It's available to all Wear OS-compatible devices, so long as you update the Spotify app in the Play Store
-
Are you a Wear OS user and a Spotify subscriber



