How do I open a .m4a file from Mail into Music app?

How do I open a .m4a file from Mail into Music app?


I mixed down a song from my band's latest session and saved it as a .m4a file (Apple AAC Audio format) and I e-mailed it to myself. Then on my phone I opened the e-mail message in Mail and held a long-press down on the attached .m4a file. But I do not see the option to open it up into the Music app. It only gives me the options of iMovie, WeChat, and USB Disk. Why would I want to open it up in those? It's a song. It should open up into the Music app so I can play it. What the heck?


Please don't tell me that I have to use iTunes to do this and sync my phone to my computer, because I *do not* want to add these songs to my iTunes library. They are *practice session tracks* that I want to listen to then delete later when we have new versions.


If there is no way to open them into the Music app, then is there a music player app I can get somewhere that will let me simply save audio files from Mail into it, and use it as a player for those songs? That's all I want to do.


The only reasonable workaround I have found so far is to save them as .mp4 audio files, which the iPhone thinks are movies, so it lets me save them into the camera roll as Videos.


Voice Memos would be acceptable as a place for them to be able to open into as well, but of course that's also not on the options list. Sigh.

iPhone 5s, iOS 7, Black, 64GB

Posted on Aug 3, 2014 9:22 PM

Reply
10 replies

Aug 4, 2014 6:30 PM in response to TJBUSMC1973

TJBUSMC1973 wrote:


You'll have to use iTunes, add it to your iTunes library, then sync it. You can always delete it from your iTunes library later.


Why is that such an issue for you?

Why do people insist on replying to threads without even reading the original post? I explained it there already!


I don't have to use iTunes to save an image from Mail into my camera roll, or to save a PDF from Mail into iBooks. Why should I have to use iTunes to save a music file into Music app?


But I'll repeat it since evidently you can't be asked to read the original posts before spamming a thread with questions that have already been answered. I *do not* want to add these songs to my iTunes library.


My iTunes library is a sacred temple into which I only allow to enter the very best and highest-fidelity musical recordings of all time. I refuse to sully and soil my iTunes library with crappy practice mixdowns from my band, etc.


Want to know why? Because I like to be able to hit "shuffle all" on my iTunes library and know that something that will improve my existence will emanate forth from this amazing device that I have invested thousands of dollars into (yes, I count my cell phone plan amongst the expenses).


I shall not have the crappy burner mixdown tracks from my band's practice sessions come up every five songs (we generate TONS of these... literally hundreds... and they are all high-bitrate .m4a tracks in the 10-15 MB range). I let iTunes keep my music folder organized on my computer. It makes copies of everything being placed into it, and I don't want 159 GB of copies of burner tracks hiding like roaches throughout my temple. We don't name these files anything sensible (in fact the guy who mixes them down intentionally gives them random weird names) and they lack metadata. So there's no easy way to delete them back out of iTunes once they're in there. It's a huge pain; I used to do it, but I swore it off years ago and *I'm never going back!*


The REAL question is, why does Apple force me to have to use iTunes—the most convoluted, kludgy piece of bloatware ever to issue forth from Cupertino—to do something as simple as adding an MP3 from Mail into the Music app on my phone? Why can't there be something simple—something equivalent to the Camera Roll inside the Music app, not only for the files I want to save from Mail, but also for my Garage Band exports, not to mention all the exports from all the various synthesizer, drum machine, and recording apps I use on a daily basis in iOS?


It would be awfully nice to be able to play the songs I've recorded right in the Music app without having to go through the rigamarole of adding those files to my iTunes library, tagging them with metadata, syncing, etc. etc. yadda yadda yadda—just to delete them again as soon as I've synced so they don't pollute my computer's iTunes library!


I bought Apple for ease of use, not so I would be forced to jump through a million hoops just do to something that ought to take one tap to accomplish! That's ridiculous!

Aug 5, 2014 11:30 AM in response to Johnathan Burger

Johnathan Burger wrote:


AAC is not an Apple format. It was made by the same people who made mp3, it is meant as an up to date sound file technically superior to mp3.


You can not add anything to the music app except through iTunes on a computer or buying it from the iTunes store on the device. Perhaps this is to prevent piracy.


YOur options are look at the App Store and find a third part app or change your sync settings to manually manage movies and music, then you can drag and drop the file onto the phone.


I never said Apple invented the AAC audio format. By "Apple AAC Audio format" I refer to the specific 256 kbps AAC format Apple uses for iTunes Plus as mentions here: https://www.apple.com/itunes/mastered-for-itunes/docs/mastered_for_itunes.pdf


Preventing me from directly adding my own music from Mail to Music does not prevent piracy. I own the rights to that file, because I played and recorded it myself.


This also wouldn't prevent other people from pirating my music, or anyone else's.


I'll contact Apple with a feature request about this.


(And BTW another option I have is to write an app to do this. 😀)

Aug 4, 2014 7:12 PM in response to DaddieMac

AAC is not an Apple format. It was made by the same people who made mp3, it is meant as an up to date sound file technically superior to mp3.


You can not add anything to the music app except through iTunes on a computer or buying it from the iTunes store on the device. Perhaps this is to prevent piracy.


YOur options are look at the App Store and find a third part app or change your sync settings to manually manage movies and music, then you can drag and drop the file onto the phone.

Jun 9, 2016 12:25 PM in response to HannahBinana

Thank you for your reply! I do not and have never used itunes but bought an audio book I wanted to listen to on Iphone - I had no idea how to do this, when I tried to open the file it only wanted to open in whatsapp? Which is a messaging app lol. I downloaded the Documents app you mentioned and it worked immediately. Thanks again. The OP should hopefully have found his solution, if not hopefully he sees this.

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How do I open a .m4a file from Mail into Music app?

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