I connected Gemini with Spotify and elevated my music experience in no time

by · Android Police

The traditional way of managing and finding music by endlessly scrolling through ‘Recommended for You’ feels like a thing of the past.

While Spotify’s own algorithms are great at finding ‘more of the same,’ Gemini brings a layer of conversational intent and discovery that traditional ‘Made for You’ mixes often miss.

Whether I’m looking for a specific 80s pop vibe for my late-night writing session or trying to bridge the gap between my favorite Bollywood tracks and global deep house, the transition from manual searching to Gemini-powered curation has been seamless.

Related

5 simple ways to supercharge your Android with Google Gemini

The Google Assistant killer?

Posts 10
By  Adnan Ahmed

Connect Spotify with Gemini

To set this up, I found that you have to navigate through the Gemini app settings directly on your phone.

Even though it’s currently a mobile-first experience, the process is straightforward when you know where to find connected apps in Gemini.

First, I opened the Gemini app on my Pixel 8 and headed to the Personal Intelligence menu. I selected Connected apps and found Spotify from the following menu.

After I sign in with my Spotify account and give the relevant permissions, the Gemini integration is live.

Before you start using Spotify with Gemini, make sure you have a Premium subscription. Otherwise, it won’t play the requested song or podcast.

Also, if you connected more than one media app (like YouTube Music and Spotify) and don’t mention using @ in your prompt, Gemini uses the last media app you used.

It’s essentially a powerful search-and-playback layer – perfect for when I’m multitasking on my phone and want to change the vibe without diving back into the Spotify app manually.

Using Gemini with Spotify

Since Gemini is capable of understanding natural language, I no longer have to search for a specific song in the chat interface.

I can give a random prompt like ‘@Spotify play that song from the Fast and Furious 7,’ and it immediately understands which track I’m talking about and starts playing ‘See you again.’

I can even say ‘Play 80s Euro-Disco that sounds like Modern Talking’ or ‘Find the latest album by Sonu Nigam,’ and Gemini is smart enough to pull relevant tracks from Spotify’s massive library.

This Spotify integration feels less like a remote control and more like a personal researcher.

We have all had a song stuck in our heads, and we can only remember one line. Instead of opening Chrome to search for the lyrics and then heading to Spotify to find the track, I can bridge the gap in one go.

For instance, I can run ‘@Spotify search for the song that goes ‘everybody’s looking for something,’ and it identifies ‘Sweet Dreams (Are Made of This) and triggers the playback immediately.

As someone juggling tech reviews and business management, my environment needs to shift gears quickly. If I’m settling for a long research session in Obsidian, I don’t want to spend ten minutes building a queue.

I can simply ask Gemini to play a Spotify playlist with Deep Focus, and it completes the job in no time. I don’t even need to open the app on my Pixel 8.

Related

Google Gemini is awesome, but it needs to copy these features from ChatGPT

Why ChatGPT still feels more complete

Posts 8
By  Rajesh Pandey

Vibe-based curation and limitations

Gemini and Spotify combo is handy for my hands-free workout transitions. If I’m out for a run with my Pixel 8, I don’t want to fumble with a touchscreen. I can call for specific energy levels based on my activity.

For instance, I can ask, ‘Play some high-tempo Bollywood party music for my workout,’ and it starts playing a relevant playlist.

These tricks work with podcasts, too. When I’m commuting or traveling, I can use Gemini to fetch the latest industry insights without scrolling through a long podcast feed.

Subscribe to our newsletter for smarter AI-music tips

Want practical, in-depth coverage of AI + music like Gemini’s Spotify integration? Subscribe to the newsletter for clear setup walkthroughs, prompt examples, limitation notes, and real-world tips that make hands-free listening work for you.


Get Updates

By subscribing, you agree to receive newsletter and marketing emails, and accept our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. You can unsubscribe anytime.

I can prompt ‘Play the latest episode from Waveform,’ and it automatically pulls the most recent upload and ensures that I’m up to date on the latest tech news.

However, the Spotify integration with Gemini isn’t without limitations. There is no way to play songs or podcasts on Spotify from the web version. When I’m at my desk, I must reach out to my Pixel just to play those songs from Spotify.

There is no way to create playlists either. I can’t ask Gemini to filter songs based on specific conditions and create a playlist from them.

AI for your ears

Connecting Gemini with Spotify is a game-changer for how we interact with our libraries, but it’s important to know where the magic happens and where the limits currently are.

It can’t create new playlists from scratch or start a radio station for you yet. However, for those of us looking to skip the manual search and simply ask for a specific mood or album, it’s a massive step toward a more intuitive, hands-free audio experience.

If you are ready to stop scrolling and start asking, this integration is the perfect place to begin.

Aside from Spotify, Gemini works well with YouTube Music.