Samsung Galaxy / GALAXY Specials > Other / TECHNO MUSIC RADIO
REVIEW
Techno Music Radio is a single-stream Andromo wrapper that does exactly one thing.
A template-built radio app from the Andromo factory that pipes a single techno stream to your Galaxy device. It works, it's free, and it's interchangeable with a hundred siblings on the same shelf.
BY THE APP COMRADE DESK · MAY 10, 2026 · 4 MIN READ
Techno Music Radio
WERNER REISCHEL
OUR SCORE
5.7
SAMSUNG GALAXY
★ 5.0
PRICE
Free
The Galaxy Store has a quiet sub-shelf of single-genre internet radio apps built on Andromo, an Android app-builder platform that lets a one-person publisher ship a working app in an afternoon. Techno Music Radio sits squarely on that shelf. It is not a station, not a service, not a community — it is a launcher for one stream, wearing the same chassis as a hundred similar launchers pointed at country, jazz, schlager, and every other format the radio dial knows.
That context matters more than the genre. Reviewing a template app on its own terms means asking a narrower question than usual: does the wrapper do its one job, and is that job worth a tile on your home screen? The answer here is yes and probably-not, in that order. The stream plays. It plays in the background. It survives a screen lock. That’s the entire feature set, and for a free download that asks nothing of you, that’s also the entire pitch.
What it doesn’t offer is a reason to choose it over a real radio aggregator that carries the same kind of stream alongside thousands of others. There is no station discovery, no metadata, no programming context. It plays techno because the URL it was pointed at plays techno, and if that URL ever stops, so does the app.
It is a play button glued to a single URL, wrapped in the default Andromo chrome, shipped to the Galaxy Store.
FEATURES
Techno Music Radio is what it sounds like — a single internet radio stream tuned to one genre, dropped into a Galaxy Store-compatible shell by Andromo, an app-builder service that mass-produces these wrappers for hobbyist publishers. Open it, hit play, hear techno. Close it, it stops.
The chrome is the default Andromo template. A header image, a play button, a stop button, and whatever ad units the builder injects. There are no station alternatives, no presets, no schedule, no DJ metadata, no equaliser, no sleep timer, no Bluetooth controls beyond what Android grants any audio app for free. It is a play button glued to a single URL, wrapped in the default Andromo chrome, shipped to the Galaxy Store.
The developer, Werner Reischel, has shipped dozens of these single-genre radio apps through the same builder — country, jazz, classical, schlager, the full radio-dial taxonomy each in its own listing. Techno Music Radio is one tile in that catalogue, distinguished from its siblings only by the URL of the upstream stream and the genre label on the icon.
MISSION ACCOMPLISHED
Stream playback is the one thing this category has to get right, and it does. The audio kicks off in a couple of seconds on a decent connection, holds steady in the background, and surfaces standard Android media controls on the lock screen. The footprint is small, the install is fast, the price is zero.
For a listener who already knows the upstream station and just wants a one-tap launcher for it on a Galaxy phone or tablet, that's a complete product. No account, no onboarding, no genre quiz.
ROOM TO IMPROVE
Everything past "press play" is missing. There is no station list, so when the stream drops you have no fallback inside the app. There is no track metadata, so you cannot see what's playing or favourite a track. There is no recording, no alarm, no timer, no Android Auto integration, no Wear OS companion. The UI is the Andromo default with no design effort layered on top.
The bigger structural issue is fragility. A template app pointed at a single third-party stream URL lives or dies by that URL staying live. If the upstream station rebrands its endpoint or goes dark, the app becomes a dead button — and there is no evidence the developer maintains active updates across a portfolio this wide.
CONCLUSION
Install it only if this specific techno station is already in your rotation and you want a dedicated tile on a Galaxy device. Anyone shopping more broadly should reach for a real radio aggregator — TuneIn, Radio.net, or myTuner — which carries thousands of streams in one app and a maintenance budget to match. Techno Music Radio is honest about what it is. What it is happens to be very small.