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TikTok has become one of the most powerful discovery engines in music. Countless songs break on the platform every year, often turning unknown artists into global hits overnight. But until now, the journey from discovering a song on TikTok to actually listening to the full track usually required leaving the app and opening a streaming service.
That’s about to change: Apple Music and TikTok have announced a new partnership that will allow Apple Music subscribers to stream full songs directly inside TikTok. The new feature, called “Play Full Song,” creates a more seamless connection between discovery and listening.
With the new integration, users who come across a song on their TikTok For You page or on a sound detail page will see a “Play Full Song” button. Tapping it opens an Apple Music player inside TikTok, allowing them to listen to the entire track without leaving the app.
Because the playback runs through Apple Music’s MusicKit framework, the stream is counted as a normal Apple Music play. That means artists and rightsholders still receive royalties through the streaming service just as they would if the listener had opened Apple Music directly.
For artists and labels, that’s a significant shift. Instead of discovery ending at a 15-second clip, it can now instantly turn into a full listen.
This move also creates a powerful conversion funnel for Apple Music. If a user taps “Play Full Song” but isn’t already subscribed, they’ll be prompted to sign up for Apple Music, including a free trial.
In other words, TikTok isn’t just driving discovery anymore—it’s becoming a direct gateway into streaming platforms.
For independent artists, that could mean a smoother path from viral moment to meaningful streams.
Alongside the new playback feature, Apple Music and TikTok are also introducing something called “Listening Party.”
This feature allows fans to listen to songs together in real time inside TikTok, interacting with each other and potentially even with the artist during the session.
It’s another step toward turning streaming into a shared social experience rather than a solitary one.
If there’s one takeaway here, it’s that the gap between discovery and streaming continues to shrink.
TikTok already drives huge moments for songs, but historically those moments didn’t always translate into streams. Integrations like this make it easier for
fans to go from hearing a clip to playing the full song instantly.
For artists releasing music today, that means two things:
When discovery, social engagement, and streaming all happen in the same place, the potential for songs to build momentum grows dramatically.
And that’s a shift every independent artist should be paying attention to.
Source: Music Business Worldwide
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