And as your subscription expires, you cannot get the Music Replay Mix surely. If you didn’t subscribe to Apple Music or just cancel the subscription, then the data of your music taste are not enough to create a one. This feature is only available for Apple Music subscribers. Make sure you have a valid subscription account Though Apple Music hasn’t offered us official workarounds for this issue, we can do the following steps to figure out the reason and solve it. In most cases, however, you are mostly likely to use this option with music only (or musical podcasts).Part 2. Note: this iTunes tutorial focused the looping/repeat functionality as it pertains to music, but the setting works outside music content also: podcasts, audiobooks, etc. With this setting, everything plays only once (whether songs or albums), and iTunes stops playing any audio content at the end of the playlist, music library, or items filtered. To restore to iTunes' default playback setting, simply go to Controls > Repeat > Off, or click the Repeat button until it displays the same picture as the screenshot on the left. This also means that you can play a single album in loop, over and over, simply by using the search field to show only that album: iTunes will then use the Repeat-All setting on whatever has been filtered: Turn off Repeat completely ("Repeat Off") Tip: The Repeat All setting applies to whatever is currently visible, and whatever is checked: if you have unchecked songs in albums or the playlist, these will be ignored, as usual. It is the same image as " Repeat One", minus the circled number one floating above. In the screenshot is shown the icon for the " Repeat All" setting. Here too, you can use the Repeat button to change the repeat mode. iTunes will automatically start over and play the first song in the playlist as soon as it reaches the last one. To repeat all songs in the current playlist (or inside your music library / folder), simply go to Controls > Repeat > All. Play an entire iTunes playlist in loop ("Repeat All") Note that changing iTunes' Repeat mode from the Controls menu or the button in the bottom left corner amounts to the same thing, and one will update the other. On the screenshot, you see the button as it appears once " Repeat One" is selected. Since iTunes also considers your music library a "playlist", play playlist once means play each item, without repeating any of them.Ĭlick several times on this button to change (or "toggle") the number of times iTunes will repeat each song or playlist. The wording is a bit confusing: the "Play playlist once" is the same as " Repeat Off" from the Controls menu. (When you are in " Repeat-One" mode, all iTunes considers is a single song as though it were its own playlist: this means that clicking the Next or Previous buttons will not do anything.) …Or use the Repeat button instead of iTunes' Controls menuĪside from changing the number of times a track plays from the Controls menu, you can also use the Repeat button visible at all times (except in Mini Player mode) in the bottom left corner of iTunes' main window (as shown on the screenshot) - moving your mouse cursor above the button confirms its functionality: " Play playlist once, repeat playlist, or repeat item". Whatever song you currently have selected will play in continuous loop until you either double-click on another track, hit the Pause button, or exit iTunes. To make iTunes play the same song over and over, go to the Controls menu, click Repeat, and choose " One" from the submenu. The Repeat command tells iTunes how many times to play an audio track: by default, repeat is set to Off, which means that iTunes plays everything only once. Play a single song in loop in iTunes ("Repeat One")
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