Both methods currently require iTunes and your Mac to do so, thus it can’t be done on your iPhone, though you can turn it off entirely if you so choose. Option 1: Update iCloud Music Library. Open iTunes on your Mac. Click File from the menu bar. Hover on Library from the drop-down menu. Click on Update iCloud Music Library. Apr 21, 2020 On your Mac. From the menu bar at the top of your screen, choose Edit Preferences. Go to the General tab and select iCloud Music Library to turn it on. If you don't subscribe to Apple Music or iTunes Match, you won’t see an option. How to Turn Off iCloud Music Library on Your iPhone or iPad 1. Open the settings app and scroll down until you see “Music,” then select it. Since you have iCloud Music Library enabled, all you need to do is add the song to your iTunes Library and it will automatically become available on your iPhone. If it does not appear on the iPhone, choose File Library Update iCloud Music Library from the iTunes menu on your computer. Turn on iCloud Music Library.
iCloud Music Library is a great feature that lets Apple users sync and share all the music tracks from Apple Music and iTunes to all devices. However, by enabling this service, you may encounter unexpected errors like:
* Songs are synced with missing or mismatched album artwork
* Tracks show wrong metadata
* live tracks matched to their studio versions
* Albums or songs refuse to sync
* ...
The more complex your music library is, the more likely the issues occur. Instead of finding a fix to those bugs, the better solution is to turn off iCloud Music Library on your devices. How? The following content will show you the complete guide to disable iCloud Music Library on your Mac, PC, and iPhone step by step.
How To Switch Off Icloud Music Library On Itunes
- Part 1. Things you should know before disabling iCloud Music Library
- What is iCloud Music Library?
- What will happen if you disable iCloud Music Library
- How to use Apple Music without iCloud Music Library
- Part 2. How to turn off iCloud Music Library
- On iPhone, iPad, iPod
- On Mac/PC
- Summary
Things you should know before disabling iCloud Music Library
Before we start to teach you how to disable iCloud Music Library, you are recommended to think about whether you need to close it. And we also have a significant suggestion for you before you start to turn iCloud Music Library off.
What is iCloud Music Library?
Launched in 2015, iCloud Music Library is the cloud-based service of Apple, which is used for the music downloaded from Apple Music. It enables you to synchronize songs, playlists, and albums automatically to iOS devices with the iCloud account. You can use this feature only if you purchase the $9.99 plan of Apple Music or pay $24.99 a year for iTunes Match. You can download up to 100,000 songs to up to 10 admitted devices. But the song cannot be larger than 200 MB or longer than 2 hours. iCloud Music Library will replace the songs with a higher quality version automatically. But you cannot sync music from iTunes to iPhone manually.
What will happen if you disable iCloud Music Library
Although turning off iCloud Music Library is a permanent solution to avoid syncing errors, you'll however lose access to music files including a cloud-based copy of your iTunes library, any saved songs from the Apple Music catalog, and other tracks you uploaded to iCloud to stream on other devices. And you cannot listen to Apple Music offline. If you decide to turn off iCloud Music Library, it is necessary to back up songs from Apple Music in advance.
How to use Apple Music without iCloud Music Library
So, if you still want to listen to Apple Music songs offline on your devices, you can do some tricks as below to use Apple Music without iCloud Music Library by downloading and converting Apple Music songs.
Step 1. Download and install TunesKit Audio Converter on your computer.
Introduction on TunesKit: TunesKit Audio Converter is an all-in-one tool for dealing with audios. It is able to convert Apple Music, iTunes songs, audiobooks, Audible audiobooks, and other common audios to MP3, AAC, M4A, M4B, FLAC, and WAV with 30X faster speed in high audio quality.
Step 2. Launch the program and add your saved Apple Music tracks to the converter. Choose the output format as MP3, FLAC, or others. Hit Convert.
Step 3. After conversion, locate the converted Apple Music files and move them to any device or player for offline listening.
For more details about Apple Music and TunesKit, you can visit this tutorial: How to Convert Apple Music to MP3.
How to turn off iCloud Music Library
When you decide to turn off iCloud Music Library, you can follow the guides in this part. We will introduce the method on iPhone, iPad, and iPod as well as the method on Mac or PC. By the way, when you only disable iCloud Music Library on some devices, the feature on other devices will not be affected.
Turn Off Icloud Music Library
How to turn off iCloud Music Library on iPhone, iPad, iPod
Follow these steps if you want to disable iCloud Music Library on your iOS devices.
How To Turn Off Icloud Music Library On Itunes
Step 1. On your iPhone, iPad, or iPod Touch, go to Settings >Music.
Step 2. Scroll down to the iCloud Music Library setting.
Step 3. Uncheck the iCloud Music Library option.
How To Turn Off Icloud Music Library On Itunes
How to turn iCloud Music Library off on Mac/PC
To turn off iCloud music on your Mac or PC, you can follow the instructions below:
Step 1. Open iTunes on the computer.
Step 2. Go to iTunes >Preferences.
Step 3. Under the General tab, uncheck the iCloud Music Library option.
Summary
If you want to turn off iCloud Music Library, you’d better know what it brings to you and what will you lose after the disabling. To summarize, you can only manually sync the Apple Music songs to other devices and cannot listen to Apple Music offline. So, you need a tool like TunesKit Audio Converter to convert Apple Music for you so that you can easily listen to Apple Music offline and sync to any other device.
Turn Off Icloud Music Library Itunes Pc
Can't Turn Off Icloud Music Library
Adam Gorden is an experienced writer of TunesKit who is obsessed about tech, movie and software.