Apps for discovering new music on Android: Last.fm, Spotify, YouTube Music, Bandcamp, NTS Radio, SoundCloud, Mixcloud, Audius

Why finding new music feels harder than it should

The streaming app you already pay for is the worst possible judge of what you should listen to next. Spotify, Apple Music, and YouTube Music all surface music that is similar to what you have already played, which is good for repeat listening and bad for hearing something new. Their algorithms reward retention, not range. That is why the same handful of recommendations keep cycling back even when your taste shifts.

These eight apps each tackle music discovery from a different angle. Some sit on top of the service you already use and read your scrobbles. Some are radio stations curated by humans. Some are platforms where independent artists upload directly, before any label discovers them. Picking the right one depends on whether you want algorithmic, editorial, social, or community discovery, so the list below is ordered by approach, not by popularity.

What to look for in a music discovery app

Before scrolling the list, a quick checklist of what actually separates a good discovery app from another streaming clone:

Quick comparison

AppDiscovery styleBest forFree tierPaid tier
Last.fmScrobble-basedA layer over any streaming serviceFull featuresPro $3/month
SpotifyAlgorithmicPersonalised playlists at scaleWith adsPremium $12.99/month
YouTube MusicSearch and moodHum-to-search and fan uploadsWith adsPremium $10.99/month
BandcampEditorialIndie genres and direct artist supportFree streamingPay per album
NTS RadioCurated radioLeftfield genres picked by hostsAd-freeSupporter $7/month
SoundCloudUGC and trendingRising and unsigned artistsWith adsGo+ $10.99/month
MixcloudDJ mixesLong-form sets and radio showsWith adsPro $7.99/month
AudiusDecentralisedElectronic and remix cultureFree foreverNone

Which app should you choose?

  1. Last.fm if you already have a streaming service and want a discovery layer on top of it that learns from everything you play.
  2. Spotify if you want one app that does both streaming and discovery. Discover Weekly and Daily Mix remain the strongest algorithmic recommendations in the category.
  3. YouTube Music if you find songs by humming or by mood, or want access to fan-uploaded remixes and live cuts that no other service licenses.
  4. Bandcamp if you listen to indie genres and want editorial recommendations from real music writers, with the option to pay artists directly.
  5. NTS Radio if your taste sits outside the mainstream. Curated radio shows from over 600 hosts cover jazz, ambient, techno, afrobeats, and dozens of niches the big services do not touch.
  6. SoundCloud if you want to hear artists before they sign to a label. The trending and Discover Weekly equivalents skew earlier than any other platform.
  7. Mixcloud if DJ sets and long-form radio shows are how you find new tracks. Mixes are properly licensed and do not vanish.
  8. Audius if you want a free, decentralised platform for electronic music, remixes, and producer-uploaded tracks with no streaming subscription required.

1. Last.fm — best discovery layer for whatever you already stream

Last.fm

Last.fm does not stream music. It scrobbles every track you play across Spotify, Apple Music, YouTube Music, Tidal, SoundCloud, and almost any other service, then builds recommendations from your full listening history rather than just one platform's slice of it. After a few weeks of scrobbles, the suggestions are noticeably more interesting than what any single service shows you, because Last.fm sees the patterns the algorithms inside Spotify do not.

The app surfaces personal artist, album, and track charts down to seven-day windows, plus similar-artist pages and tag-based exploration. Every artist page shows recommended similar acts, often pulling in obscure names that streaming services bury under licensing partners. The community editor adds biographical notes and tags that make the rabbit hole worth falling into.

The trade-off is that you still need a streaming service to actually play the music. Last.fm sits beside it, not instead of it. The free tier is generous enough that most users never need Pro.

Download: AptoideGoogle PlayApp Store

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Pricing: Free with unlimited scrobbles and recommendations. Pro is $3/month and removes ads on the website.

2. Spotify — best built-in algorithmic discovery

Spotify

Spotify still sets the benchmark for algorithmic music discovery. Discover Weekly drops 30 fresh tracks every Monday based on what you and similar listeners have played. Daily Mix builds genre-flavoured stations from your library. Release Radar surfaces new music from artists you follow. Smart Shuffle inserts unknowns into your own playlists. The combined effect is that even passive listeners hear new material every week.

The catalogue covers around 100 million tracks across major and independent labels, which means the recommendation engine has plenty of room to work. Free Spotify still gives you the full catalogue with ads and on-demand playback caps on mobile.

The blind spot is that Spotify reinforces what you already listen to. It does not push hard outside your existing genres unless you actively search for something new. For real range, pair it with Last.fm or NTS.

Download: AptoideGoogle PlayApp StoreSamsung

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Pricing: Free with ads. Premium Individual $12.99/month, Family $21.99/month, Student $5.99/month.

If you are switching away from a paid plan, our Spotify alternatives roundup covers seven services worth migrating to.

3. YouTube Music — best for hum-to-search and mood discovery

YouTube Music

YouTube Music has the broadest catalogue of any streaming service because it inherits two decades of fan uploads, live cuts, remixes, demos, and bootlegs from YouTube proper. The hum-to-search feature identifies songs from a few seconds of you humming or singing, then drops them straight into your library. Mood-based discovery mixes ride alongside the standard genre stations.

Activity-based mixes for Workout, Relax, and Focus pull from your history and adjust as you skip. Discover Mix and New Release Mix update weekly, similar in spirit to Spotify's playlists but skewed toward the long-tail content that only exists on YouTube.

The free tier blocks background playback, which makes it less practical than Spotify or Bandcamp for in-pocket listening. Premium fixes that and adds offline downloads.

If song identification is your main need, our Shazam alternatives roundup covers seven dedicated music-recognition apps in more depth.

Download: AptoideGoogle PlayApp StoreSamsung

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Pricing: Free with ads. Premium $10.99/month. Family $16.99/month. Bundled with YouTube Premium at $13.99/month.

4. Bandcamp — best for indie editorial discovery

Bandcamp

Bandcamp is the closest thing the streaming era has to a music magazine attached to a record store. Bandcamp Daily publishes essays, artist features, and genre guides written by working music journalists, and every recommendation links straight to a buy button. The catalogue depth in indie rock, experimental, jazz, electronic, and metal is the strongest of any platform.

Discovery happens through the editorial side, the feed of artists you follow, and tag-based browsing. Pay-what-you-want pricing on most albums means trying new artists costs nothing if you do not want it to. On Bandcamp Fridays the full purchase price goes to the artist with no platform cut.

Bandcamp does not have an algorithmic recommender. Discovery here is deliberate, not endless-scroll. If you want a feed that fills itself, look elsewhere.

Download: AptoideGoogle PlayApp Store

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Pricing: Free streaming. Albums and tracks priced individually by artists, often pay-what-you-want.

5. NTS Radio — best curated radio discovery

NTS Radio

NTS started as a community radio station in Hackney, London in 2011 and has grown into one of the most respected music curation platforms anywhere. The app streams two live channels around the clock plus more than a dozen Infinite Mixtape channels covering genres including poly-jazz, slow focus, ambient, low end theory, and global beats. Tens of thousands of archived shows from over 600 resident hosts sit behind the live feed.

Discovery on NTS is not algorithmic, it is editorial and deeply human. Real DJs, producers, and record collectors build shows around themes, eras, or scenes. Hosts include established artists like Floating Points, Iglooghost, and Charlotte Adigery alongside lesser-known curators with niche taste. The breadth covers genres the major streaming services do not surface at all.

The app is 100% ad-free even on the free tier. Supporter is voluntary and unlocks live tracklisting, archive timestamps, and merchandise discounts.

Download: AptoideGoogle Play

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Pricing: Free, 100% ad-free. NTS Supporter from $7/month for live tracklisting, archive timestamps, and Supporter-only channels.

6. SoundCloud — best for rising and unsigned artists

SoundCloud

SoundCloud is where artists upload first. Whether a track will end up on Spotify in six months or never gets a label deal at all, the demo, the remix, or the early version usually appears on SoundCloud first. The catalogue includes more than 300 million tracks from 30 million artists across 193 countries, weighted heavily toward independent and pre-debut work.

Discovery happens through SoundCloud Weekly, the Discover feed, trending charts, and the reposts of artists you follow. Comments threaded inline with the waveform turn each track into a small community, and following one early-stage producer often leads to the entire scene they sit inside. For hip-hop, electronic, and emerging pop, no other service surfaces breaking music as early.

The trade-off is reliability. Tracks vanish when uploaders run into copyright issues, and the free tier limits on-demand listening to 30 minutes a month after the first three songs. Go+ pricing climbed to $10.99/month, removing the indie-cheapness pitch the service used to lead with.

If those caps bite, our SoundCloud alternatives roundup covers seven platforms with similar catalogues and friendlier pricing.

Download: AptoideGoogle PlayApp StoreSamsung

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Pricing: Free with ads. Go $5.99/month removes ads and adds offline. Go+ $10.99/month adds the full premium catalogue and high-quality audio.

7. Mixcloud — best for DJ sets and radio show discovery

Mixcloud

Mixcloud licenses long-form audio properly, which means a two-hour techno set or a four-hour ambient radio show does not vanish to a copyright claim the next day. For listeners who find new tracks through DJ mixes rather than individual songs, that single fact makes it the most reliable home on the internet. Track IDs are surfaced on supported uploads so you can chase down what just played.

Discovery happens through following DJs, browsing trending shows, and exploring radio stations that broadcast through Mixcloud's platform. Independent stations from around the world stream live shows directly. Mixcloud Pro lets listeners support specific DJs through monthly subscriptions, which unlocks exclusive mixes from those creators.

The licensing rules limit on-demand control inside a mix, so you cannot scrub through a single set freely. You can skip to the next show without limits.

Download: AptoideGoogle PlayApp Store

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Pricing: Free with ads. Pro $7.99/month removes ads and adds offline. Direct DJ subscriptions priced individually.

8. Audius — best decentralised discovery

Audius Music

Audius is a streaming platform that runs on a decentralised network rather than a single company's servers. There is no subscription. Listening is free forever at 320 kbps, and artists upload directly without label gatekeeping. Electronic music, remixes, and producer-uploaded tracks are the strongest categories.

Discovery uses a trending feed, genre browsing, and artist-follow timelines. Because Audius routes uploads around standard streaming licensing, it is the only place to legally hear some remixes and DJ tools. Cosigns from established artists like RAC, deadmau5, and Skrillex anchor the catalogue at one end while emerging producers form the bulk of new uploads.

Audius is narrower than the other platforms here. If your tastes run outside electronic or remix culture, the catalogue thins out quickly. For producers and electronic listeners it is closer to indispensable.

Download: AptoideGoogle Play

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Pricing: Free, no paid tier.


How to pick the right one

The simplest way to choose is by matching how you want recommendations to arrive.

Most listeners get the best results by combining two of these. Spotify or YouTube Music as the primary player, Last.fm scrobbling underneath, and one curation source (NTS, Bandcamp, or SoundCloud) for genuinely new directions.

FAQ

What is the best app for discovering new music in 2026?

For most listeners, Spotify still leads on algorithmic discovery thanks to Discover Weekly and Daily Mix. If you already use another streaming service or want recommendations that span everything you play, Last.fm sits on top of any platform and pulls suggestions from your full listening history.

Is there a better music discovery tool than Spotify?

For pure algorithm-driven recommendations, no, Spotify Discover Weekly is still the most accurate. For taste expansion, yes, several. NTS Radio uses human curation. Last.fm uses your cross-service history. Bandcamp uses editorial writing. Each surfaces music Spotify will not.

What is the best free app for finding new songs?

Audius is free forever with no ads. Bandcamp streams the full catalogue free. NTS Radio is free and ad-free. SoundCloud Free works if you can live with the on-demand cap. YouTube Music Free works if you do not need background playback.

What is the No. 1 music app for discovery?

Measured by recommendation accuracy at scale, Spotify. Measured by editorial range, Bandcamp Daily plus NTS Radio. Measured by access to early or unsigned material, SoundCloud. There is no single winner across all three dimensions.

Can Last.fm replace my streaming service?

No. Last.fm does not play music itself. It scrobbles whatever you play on Spotify, Apple Music, YouTube Music, Tidal, SoundCloud, or any other service, then builds recommendations from your history. You still need a streaming service for actual playback.

How do I find new music without using Spotify?

Pick a discovery source that suits your taste. NTS Radio for curated radio shows, Bandcamp for indie editorial, SoundCloud for unsigned artists, Mixcloud for DJ sets, Audius for free decentralised streaming. Run Last.fm in the background to track everything and feed back into recommendations.

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