Google today announced the Songza website and app will be killed off on January 31, 2016. The Google Play Music team has been working hard to port over Songza’s features, and as of today the two apps have reached feature parity. As a result, Songza users are being given two months to make the switch.

Google acquired Songza in July 2014, when a spokesperson said, “No immediate changes to Songza are planned, other than making it faster, smarter, and even more fun to use.” Songza features naturally started to trickle into Google Play Music: In October 2014, contextual playlists were added (Songza’s Concierge feature) to the subscription streaming service and in June 2015, a free ad-supported web radio service (Songza’s curated playlists) was added for U.S. users.

The latter feature is also launching in Canada today. Because Songza was only ever available in the U.S. and Canada, this means all Songza users are now covered by Google Play Music. While Google’s app is available in 60 countries, only the U.S. and Canada currently have free radio, while 13 countries have Concierge (France, Sweden, and Norway were added only this week).

Again, Songza’s most popular features (curated stations, free radio, cheeky playlists) are all built into Google Play Music now for free. In other words, if you’re still using Songza, you really have no reason not to switch. And the service’s four founders, all of which are still at Google, urge you to take the plunge:

I had the opportunity to speak with two of the four, Elias Roman and Elliott Breece. I specifically asked if there was anything that a die-hard Songza user may miss if they switch to Google Play Music. Roman said, “While I guarantee you could find something,” and Breece added, “Maybe something in the settings menu…” Short answer? No.

In fact, even though Songza is essentially dead at this point, the founders still use both apps every day just “to make sure there’s parity.” The founders really want to get the transition right. Hell, if they didn’t, Songza would have died a much quicker death.

Songza users are being notified of the Google Play move on the service’s website, in the app, and by email. You’ll definitely want to visit the app: Users can migrate their accounts to Google Play Music, including all their favorite songs and playlists. That means favorited stations, recent stations, and even thumbs-upped songs get moved from Songza to Google Play Music.

All you have to do is hit the orange button:

The good news is that when you link your Songza account to Google Play, all the syncing happens in the cloud, Roman and Breece explained. So if you don’t have Google Play Music downloaded, you lose connection, or you just get distracted, none of that will matter because your Songza data will be transferred over regardless.

The Google Play Music team “wants to focus on building one product.” So with Songza out of the picture, what’s next for Google Play Music? The promised family plan and podcast support are still on the way.

But the broader goals are even more interesting. Both founders agreed that music services today still have a lot of friction.

“Our vision is always to improve what people do every day with music,” Roman outlined. Like Songza before it, the goal of Google Play Music is to provide you with the right song at the right time, not just simply to output audio.

Breece elaborated further: The Google Play Music team wants to explore making that process seamless, specifically further diving into the “intersection of expert curation and algorithmic optimization.”

To compete in the vicious online music industry, Songza’s features will have to roll out to all of Google Play Music’s 60 countries. Given licensing issues and the fact that Concierge has to be built from the ground up for each country, that’s not an easy feat.

But first, the old app has to retire smoothly. Here is the email sent to Songza users today: