echoft is a free app for iOS and Android that streams the Internet Archive's 20-million-item audio library like it's a live radio station. Browse, tune, play. No accounts. No ads. Always live.
Audio items in the IA catalog. Music, radio, podcasts, lectures, field recordings, broadcasts.
From wax-cylinder restorations to last-week's open-mic. Every decade, every format, every weirdo upload.
No subscription. No ads. No tracking. Forever free.
Native app on iOS and Android. Web preview at echoft.com. Plays in background, lockscreen, offline.
Browse by era, genre, mood, or pure accident. We surface the weird — the field recording from a Brooklyn subway in 1955 — not just the Greatest Hits.
One tap, instant playback. Background, lockscreen, offline. No accounts. No paywall. No algorithm grooming your taste.
Save anything, anywhere. Export to .m3u, share a link, take your taste off-platform whenever you want. It's just files.
Move the needle from 1900 to 2026 — or just type and press play. Real items from the Internet Archive, streaming right here in your browser.
Every audio item the Internet Archive has indexed. Always available, always free, always live.
From 1900s wax cylinders to last week's open mic. The widest catalog any music app has ever shipped.
No subscription. No ads. No tracking. Built on public-domain audio.
echoft is made by Logic FT Inc. — an independent two-person studio. No investors, no ad model, no roadmap promised to anyone but the people who use it.
We started because the Internet Archive has the largest audio collection ever assembled by humans — and it deserves a player that feels like a music app. Built for iOS, Android, and the web.
Every track on echoft streams directly from the Internet Archive — a non-profit digital library that has been preserving the world's audio since 1996.
We're not affiliated, sponsored, or endorsed. We're just very, very grateful. → visit archive.org
echoft is a free app. iOS, Android, web preview. Two people built it. Twenty million recordings inside.