Google Play Music All Access comes to Finland, Russia, the Netherlands, and a few other places

BY Stefan Constantinescu

Published 1 Oct 2013

Google is trying hard, really hard, to be a content provider. They already have your credit card on file for when you buy applications, so why not try and sell you movies, music, and books? Earlier this year, the company introduces a new service called “Google Play Music All Access”. Horrible name aside, it’s the search company’s clone of Spotify. You pay a handful of dollars a month to Google, they’ll let you stream as much damn music as you want.

Unfortunately, like Spotify’s early days, All Access has been limited to a small number of countries. That list has been growing, but nowhere near as fast as we’d all like. Well, today All Access comes to seven new countries, brining the total number of countries where you can get All Access to 19. Those new seven countries are the Czech Republic, Finland, Hungary, Liechtenstein, the Netherlands, Russia, and Switzerland.

Should you try All Access? If you’re up for it, then why not? Personally, I share a Spotify account with my partner. She likes to listen to music on her phone, I prefer listening to music on the stereo at home, so it works out perfectly for us.

[Via: Android Central]