Summary
TunesBank Apple Music Converter is perfectly compatible with macOS 11 Big Sur now. The software is designed to remove DRM from Apple Music and convert songs to MP3, M4A, AAC, FLAC, AC3, AU or AIFF with 100% audio quality, so that you can listen to Apple Music offline for free on macOS 11 Big Sur.

Updated: TunesBank Apple Music Converter v.1.7.0 has been released, and it works perfectly on macOS 11 Big Sur. Now you can remove DRM from Apple Music and get MP3/M4A songs from Apple Music on macOS 11 Big Sur.

Will you use Apple Music on macOS 11 Big Sur? The latest macOS 11 Big Sur has been launched, and you can listen to Apple Music on macOS 11 Big right now. But all Apple Music files are protected by DRM, you will be subject to some restrictions when using Apple Music. If you desire to listen to Apple Music songs on other unauthorized devices, Apple Music Converter is an essential tool. Now, TunesBank has launched Apple Music Converter to enable Mac users to listen to Apple music songs more freely. The latest version v.1.7.0 is fully compatible with macOS 11 Big Sur. With it, you can bypass Apple Music’s DRM and convert songs to MP3/M4A and other formats. After that, it is easy to transfer Apple Music to MP3 players or other devices offline listening. Let’s see what this update brings:

Major updates of TunesBank Apple Music Converter (for macOS 11 Big Sur):

#1 Suitable for the latest macOS 11 Big Sur, and macOS 10.9 to macOS Catalina 10.15.
#2 Fully compatible with the latest iTunes 12.8.
#3 Optimized the conversion speed.
#4 Fixed some minor bugs.

Now TunesBank Apple Music Converter Is Fully Compatible with macOS 11 Big Sur

iTunes is split into 3 sections on the latest macOS Catalina, namely Apple Music, Podcast and Apple TV. In response to this strategy, TunesBank also released an TunesBank Apple Music Converter compatible with macOS 11 Big Sur. With it, you can now convert Apple music songs to MP3, M4A, AAC, FLAC, AC3, AU or AIFF format with 100% original quality. Fast, lossless, batch conversion, ID3 tag retention are all factors that make TunesBank Apple Music Converter become the top Apple Music Converter. After getting the DRM-free Apple Music files, you can enjoy Apple Music on various devices, including MP3 players, Xbox, iPod nano/shuffle, PS4, and even burn Apple Music to CD.

Powerful Features of TunesBank Apple Music Converter:

Apple Music DRM Removal
The music files you download from the Apple Music app are all protected by DRM. TunesBank Apple Music Converter helps you remove DRM from Apple Music songs, playlists, and albums, so you can use Apple Music files freely.

Get MP3, M4A, AAC, FLAC, AC3, AU or AIFF Files from Apple Music
TunesBank Apple Music Converter aims to convert Apple Music to DRM-free MP3, M4A, AAC, FLAC, AC3, AU or AIFF format, so that you can play Apple Music songs offline on most devices.

Beautiful ID3 Tag Storage
After conversion, all ID3 tags, such as song title, album, artist, genre, track number, artwork, etc. are retained in the output file. You can quickly create a favorite music playlist.

Fast Conversion Speed
It can convert Apple music files on Mac at 5X speed. In addition, it has an excellent user interface and you can always check how many songs are currently being downloaded and how many songs have been completed.

Powerful Audiobook Converter
In addition to converting Apple Music and iTunes M4P music, TunesBank Apple Music Converter is also a powerful audiobook converter that can be used to convert iTunes M4B audiobooks, AA/AAX audiobooks to MP3/M4A.

High Compatibility
TunesBank Apple Music Converter for Mac is fully compatible with 10.11 El Capitan, 10.12 Sierra, 10.13 High Sierra, 10.14 Mojave, 10.15 Catalina, 11.0 Big Sur.

Lifetime Free Upgrade & Support
After purchasing TunesBank Apple Music Converter, users can enjoy lifetime upgrades and technical support services for free.

A Complete User Guide for Removing DRM from Apple Music with TunesBank

Step 1. Install TunesBank Apple Music Converter
Click the link below to get the installation package of TunesBank Apple Music Converter. Remember, this software is suitable for Mac and Windows computers, in this case, you can easily download and save Apple Music to your computer.

Step 2. Launch TunesBank Apple Music Converter
Once the TunesBank Apple Music Converter is launched, the iTunes or Music application will also be launched automatically. Your music library will be loaded as a playlist and listed in the left panel.

launch the converter and sign in Apple ID

Step 3. Select Apple Music Songs
Click the playlist, and then tick the checkboxes of the Apple Music songs you want to convert. In addition, you can enter the song title, album or artist in the search bar and press Enter to import the song.

add Apple Music playlist

Step 4. Choose Output Format and Audio Quality
In the bottom panel, you can select the output format, audio quality, output folder, etc. In addition, you can also customize the output parameters. With it, you can convert Apple Music to MP3, M4A, AAC, FLAC, AC3, AU or AIFF format at up to 5X speed.

customize output settings

Step 5. Remove DRM from Apple Music
Now click the “Convert” button to start to remove DRM from Apple Music and the songs will be converted to MP3 one by one.

Convert Apple Music to MP3

After completion, the “View Output File” button will be displayed, click on it and you can find the converted MP3 file.

get Apple Music MP3 files

Conclusion

TunesBank Apple Music Converter performs well on Mac and Windows PCs. It helps you remove DRM from Apple Music files and convert them to any format you want, such as MP3 or M4A, without quality loss. In this way, you can play Apple Music songs on any device, including MP3 players, iPod nano/shuffle, Xbox, PSP, tablets and other media players. It is good advice for anyone who wants to avoid Apple’s high subscription costs.

TunesBank Apple Music Converter for macOS 11 Big Sur

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Christina has always had great enthusiasm for writing, programming and web development. He likes writing about software and technology, his works are featured on some tech blogs or forums like Tom's Hardware, CNET, etc.