A lot of folks donāt know that you can use music from within your own library for alarms in iOS, so you can, for example, wake up to the sounds of Mƶtley Crüe. (Letās face itāI chose that band just because I wanted to use umlauts. I never get to use umlauts.) So if you would like to pick your own soothingĀ alarm music, get started by tapping on the Clock app on your iPhone or iPadā¦
ā¦then under the āAlarmā tab, touch āEdit.ā
When you do so, youāll see red minuses next to your alarms, with which you could delete one if you wanted to. Tap any alarm in the middle (away from the red minus) to set its music.
To do that, youāll touch āSoundā on the subsequent screen.
From there, you can of course select any existing ringtones (including the default iOS ones), but if you tap āPick a songāā¦
ā¦youāll get access to your music library on the device, from which you can set a song to wake up to.
And the next morning at 7 a.m., your slumber will be pleasantly interrupted by GWAR or Insane Clown Posse or Taylor Swift or whatever frightful thing you pick.
Sorry, Taylor.
I wake up with Spotify, and I use Tunelf Spotify Music Converter and Google Alarm to set Spotify music as my alarm sound. It’s a great thing to wake up with my favorite songs.
For me, I set Apple Music as my clock alarm to wake me up. And to do this, I also need help from DRmare Audio Converter Mac. With it, I can get Apple Music to my phone and set them as alarm with ease.
Done and done. But not Mƶtley Crue. Thank you.
Ha!
Thank YOU for reading! š