Tech

Your iPhone can identify any song with just a tap. Here's how to set it up

Key Points
  • The iPhone has a feature that's a little buried that syncs with Shazam and helps you identify any song with one tap.
  • It can also save a history of the songs you've identified, so you can add them to playlists later.

In this article

Taylor Swift
Christopher Polk | Getty Images

Your iPhone has a useful feature you might not know about. You can identify the song that's playing on the radio at a bar, in your car or at a friend's house, all without having to open an app. All you have to do is swipe down and tap a single button.

It's part of the iPhone's and iPad's integration with music-recognition service Shazam, which Apple acquired in 2018. It's been available for a couple of years but might be more useful now that people are out and about again. You don't even need Shazam installed.

Your iPhone can recognize music with just a tap in iOS 14.2.
Todd Haselton | CNBC

Here's how to set it up.

  • Open Settings on your iPhone.
  • Tap Control Center.
  • Scroll down under "More" and tap the green '+' button next to Music Recognition.

That adds the music recognition function to Control Center, which you access by swiping down from the top-right of your screen, or from the bottom of the screen if you have an iPhone with a Home button.

How to identify a song from your iPhone

Tap this button to identify songs from your iPhone.
Todd Haselton | CNBC

Once you've done that, you can use your iPhone to identify a song by swiping down from the top-right of the screen to open Control Center and then tapping the Shazam button. Your phone will listen for a few seconds, then show the artist and title at the top of your screen. And it'll save a history of the songs you've identified so you can go back and see them later. To do that, just press and hold the Shazam button.

That's it!

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