Neil Young launches XStream music streaming service after closing PonoMusic download store

Neil Young is launching a music streaming service called XStream, following the closure of his PonoMusic download store.

Posting on the Pono Community site (via The Verge), Young described XStream as an "adaptive streaming service that changes with available bandwidth". According to Young, this will help differentiate it from the raft of services currently dominating the market, such as Spotify, Tidal and Apple Music.

This confirms what Young said back in December, when he revealed the PonoMusic store - Pono's ill-fated download shop - would "re-emerge as a streaming service". However, there's no word on the "hi-res download store" Young also mentioned in that interview.

The project is still a bit light on specifics - there's no word on when the service will launch, or how much it will cost - though Young insists "there will be no premium price". Young says an official announcement will follow "very soon", so watch this space.

Young wasn't always such a fan of streaming. A couple of years ago, he claimed it had the "worst [sound] quality in the history of broadcasting".

Joe Svetlik

Joe has been writing about tech for 20 years, first on staff at T3 magazine, then in a freelance capacity for Stuff, The Sunday Times Travel Magazine (now defunct), Men's Health, GQ, The Mirror, Trusted Reviews, TechRadar and many more. His specialities include all things mobile, headphones and speakers that he can't justifying spending money on.