Review: Everything You Need to Know About Sonos Radio

Can curated streaming with the help of Thom Yorke and Angel Olsen entice you buy new speakers?

Sonos Radio

Sonos Radio is a new, exclusive service to Sonos owners

By Kirk Miller

Nota bene: If you buy through the links in this article, we may earn a small share of the profits.

Do we really need another streaming music service?

Even if it’s free?

Audio brand Sonos just launched Sonos Radio, an ambitious new service that offers access to 60,000+ radio stations worldwide, along with a collection of artist-curated radio stations (Thom Yorke, Brittany Howard, David Byrne, etc.), 30+ exclusive stations that attempt to subvert genres and focus more on moods (Sunset Fuzz, La Movida, Cruise Control), plus a dedicated new channel called Sound System that also offers up a music hour every Wednesday guest-hosted by the likes of Angel Olsen, JPEGMAFIA, Phoebe Bridgers, Jeff Parker (Tortoise) and Vagabon. 

You’ll need Sonos speakers to use the new Sonos Radio service
Sonos

The key point, though, is that this is a Sonos exclusive. Meaning, if you don’t have the brand’s speakers (oh, look, they’re offering deals this week!), you don’t have access to the Sonos Radio content.

Does it matter? Sonos is a great speaker system, but they already offer 100+ streaming services through their devices. And that includes TuneIn, iHeartRadio and Napster (formerly Rhapsody), which help power the back-end of the Sonos Radio service. 

We spent the first two days of the Sonos Radio service checking out different features and channels. Our thoughts:

Set-up: It took a day or so for the new Sonos service to appear in my app (apparently it wasn’t an all-at-once rollout — if you’re unsure, it’s v 11.1 on iOS … and whatever your operating system, the app should be touting Sonos Radio front and center). Once you’ve updated, go to the “Browse” tab and Sonos Radio should be the first selection. 

What you’re getting: 60,000+ radio stations around the globe and 30+ Sonos-curated channels, all for free. The selling points, however, is Sound System — the flagship Sonos station — and channels curated by cool indie/underground music artists.

Once you get away from the Sonos Presents stations, you can choose from Local Radio, Featured stations (BBC Radio 1, ESPN, KCRW, Radio Disney, etc.) and a catch-all Browse Radio section divided into music, news/talk, sports and locations filters. Within the music genres, the Sonos stations get priority listing. 

Thom Yorke’s curated Sonos station is the mind trip you’d expect

What worked: 

What kind of worked: 

What needs work:

What we don’t know:

As this is a free service (minus the hardware), you can’t click through to the next song if you don’t like something — unless you want to keep changing stations. So in a way, this is just like old-school radio, albeit with an adventurous playlist.

The good news is that whatever you play is gonna sound great, and there are enough well-curated channels in the Sonos biosphere that you’ll most likely (outside of mainstream rock) find a station that’ll suit your mood. And if you don’t? Again, you have 60,000 other stations and 100+ streaming services that’ll still work just fine with your speakers.

Sonos Radio isn’t a game changer, but it’s a nice, free add-on to your home audio system … if that system happens to be Sonos.  

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