Sometimes I catch it in time and sometimes I don’t. When I miss out, I’ll try to do a web search for some of the lyrics. But if it’s a piece of classical music, I could be out of luck. So when I discovered Now Playing, a handy feature on my Pixel 7 Pro that would automatically identify music playing nearby and display the title and artist on my home screen, naturally, I was interested. But first I was concerned about privacy. In order for a phone to recognize a song, it must be listening.  Also: The Pixel phones may be getting a long overdue security feature If a phone is listening, is someone receiving what it’s hearing? Is what it’s hearing being saved on a remote server for later listening? According to information in the phone’s settings, the feature uses “a song database stored on your device” and “the automatic recognition process never sends audio or background conversations to Google” or, based on my reading, to a third-party service. What this means is by enabling the feature, you’re not disabling your privacy.  If you’re concerned and want to test this, you can always enable the feature, switch your device to Airplane mode, and try playing music nearby. If the feature still works, you can be even more certain your phone isn’t sending information to anyone. Note that if you enable the lock screen search button, a second setting, when you tap the button that does send “a short, digital audio fingerprint” to Google. This feature doesn’t work in Airplane mode. Also: How to find and remove spyware from your phone I’ve tested the Now Playing feature and found it to be pretty accurate, regardless of genre. I have found, however, that it will often depend on words to identify the piece of music. For example, it was able to identify Mozart’s “Requiem in D Minor, K. 626,” once the singers joined in.  When I gave it Samuel Barber’s “Adagio for Strings,” it recognized it immediately. It did have a bit of trouble with the Hellraiser soundtrack by Ben Lovett, in that it couldn’t recognize a single song. I tested it against other soundtracks and found it couldn’t even recognize one of the most recognizable pieces of music, the “Theme From Jurassic Park” by John Williams – nor was it able to recognize Williams’ other giant hit, “Star Wars Main Title.”  Outside of original soundtracks, the feature was shockingly accurate, even with some of my more obscure artists. Just know that the feature is a bit iffy on instrumental tracks (although it did immediately recognize “YYZ” by Rush). In other words, your mileage may vary. If this sounds like a feature you might want to make use of, let me show you how to enable it.

How to set your Pixel’s lock screen to identify music with Now Playing

Requirements

The only thing you’ll need for this is a Pixel phone. All Pixel phones except the first-gen model have a version of this feature; starting with the Pixel 3a there’s a favorite feature, and the Pixel 4 and onward have the lock screen search button.   That’s all you need. Let’s recognize some music.

How to use Now Playing

You don’t have to do anything to use Now Playing. When your device hears music, it will automatically display its best guess (which is usually correct) on your device’s lock screen.  Also: What are the best headphones for music? You’ll know the database download is complete when the" Downloading song database" warning goes away. And that’s all there is to enabling and using the Pixel Now Playing feature, which helps take the guesswork out of naming songs you don’t recognize. You can also tap the information displayed for more options, such as opening the song on YouTube. Also: How to download YouTube videos for free If you’ve also enabled the lock screen search button, then when music is playing nearby that it can’t identify, you’ll see a small circular icon of a musical note in the same place you’d see the title and artist of a recognized track. Tap this for a search, and if it finds the track it’ll give you the same options.