The Individual Plan HD runs $12.99 a month or $129 a year, while the Family Plan HD (which can accommodate up to six members) goes for $19.99 a month or $199 a year. Following the trial, renewal offers vary. ![]() To access it all, Amazon Music Unlimited offers a full 90-day free trial listening period to both current Amazon Music subscribers and newbies alike - and that alone should be incentive enough to sign up, if you haven’t already. Here, Amazon offers two tiers of hi-res: 1) High Definition (HD), which claims to have over 50 million lossless audio tracks at 16-bit/44.1kHz and 2) Ultra HD, with “millions” of lossless songs up to 24/192. ![]() The reason for this sea change is that the online retail giant is now trumpeting Amazon Music HD. Rarely have I bothered following through - I mean, why bother, when I have numerous top-shelf hi-res music streaming services at my fingertips? - but it’s since become a whole new world. Many has been the time where midnight on a Friday rolls around with an email notifying me I can begin streaming (or downloading) whatever new album (or five) I’ve purchased in physical format via Amazon Prime. ![]() I’m sure it comes as no surprise that, as much as I visit brick-and-mortar record stores whenever and wherever I can, I also continue to buy a lot of physical product through Amazon. Until now, I have to admit I’d never really accessed the standard Amazon Music service with any regularity. The more I listened to hi-res music with Amazon’s newly upgraded streaming service, Amazon Music HD, the more I could hear the voice of Michael Palin’s Cardinal Ximénez from the infamous Monty Python’s Flying Circus sketch about The Spanish Inquisition, albeit with one verbal twist: “Nobody expects Amazon Music HD!”
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