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Alexa now tells you when your favorite artists drop a new album

Wish there was a way to be alerted the second that banging album you’ve been anticipating drops? You’re in luck. Amazon today debuted New Release Notifications for its Alexa voice assistant, which lets you follow artists and receive notifications when new songs or records become available on Amazon Music.
New Release Notifications was announced in September during Amazon’s Echo hardware event in Seattle, but it’s now available for all customers in the U.S.
Using the new feature’s as easy as saying, “Alexa, follow <an artist> on Amazon Music,” or “Alexa, let me know when <an artist> has new music” to an Alexa-enabled device within earshot. You don’t necessarily need to know the name of the artist, even; when a tune’s playing via Alexa, saying, “Alexa, follow this artist on Amazon Music,” or “Alexa, let me know when this artist has a new album,” will add the musical group to your follow list.
If voice commands aren’t your style, there’s an accompanying New Release Notifications component within the Amazon Music client iOS, Android, and Android and web player. Selecting the “follow” button next to an artist’s name similarly adds them to the list.
Amazon Alexa New Releases
As soon as new music becomes available from folks you’re following, you’ll get a notification through Echo speakers association with your account and the Amazon Music app. Ask Alexa to play that music, and you might hear a recorded message from the artist, Amazon said.
To take advantage of New Release Notifications, you’ll have to enable notifications on Alexa. It’s relatively easy: Launch the Alexa companion app for Android, iOS, and Fire OS, and then select Alexa Devices and a device from the list. Next, navigate to the Notifications section of the Sounds menu, and ensure Notification sounds aren’t switched to “None.”
The debut of New Release Notifications comes just days after the public launch of Amazon’s Music Skill API, which allows developers to stream songs from online services to Alexa devices and Amazon Echo speakers. Developers don’t need to build their own voice user interface — instead, they simply provide music metadata to Amazon on a “regular basis,” and Amazon takes care of updating the voice models in the background.
Earlier this week, Amazon launched Alexa Presentation Language (APL) — a suite of tools designed to make it easier for developers to create “visually rich” skills for Alexa devices with screens, such as Amazon’s Echo Show, Fire TV, Fire Tablet, and Echo Spot — in public beta. And it launched new white-box Alexa original design manufacturer (ODM) hardware: Calix’s GigaSpire Max and Gemtek’s Vita.
Source: VentureBeat
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