July 30, 2006

SingShot Enters Online Karaoke Space

Michael Arrington

26 comments »

kSolo, acquired by Fox Interactive back in May, faces some new competition in the online karaoke space. SingShot is releasing their own variation of online karaoke tomorrow. The new service is essentially a copy of kSolo heavily influenced by the successful YouTube user interface.

All the basic functionality of the kSolo product is there. Performers can select from a library of songs that are at least about two to three years old, listen to a demo, and record their own version while following along with the lyrics on the screen. The hope is to repeat the success of other social content sites like YouTube by allowing users to share their songs to be voted and commented on by the public. The human filtering will hopefully pick out the Kelly Clarksons in a forest of William Hungs.

The big differences in these two services lie in the details. First of all, kSolo spurned Flash, the now-ubiquitous platform for online video, requires a plugin and runs only on Internet Explorer. SingShot runs completely on Flash and works in all browsers, making it a breeze to set up and start running. Users just have change their Flash settings to allow the program access to their mic. While both programs allow performances to be shared, SingShot follows the simple YouTube model and allows a simple cut and paste link or embed, whereas kSolo has a clunky share feature that allows you to email a link or, after a little hunting, embed your entire playlist on a page.

Both services still haven’t gotten navigation right, though. I found it hard to stumble upon new songs or find ones where I only remembered part of the title or lyrics. Instead, I found myself filtering through broad categories (rock, pop, or 80s) and having to repeatedly hit “next page”. The simple addition of page numbers along the bottom would really help skim through the categories. However, unlike SingShot, kSolo’s search engine fails to recognize “the Beatles” as the same as “Beatles, the”. kSolo does have one up on SingShot when it comes to finding new music, though. They have a feature that allows you to find music that is similar the song you just recorded.

For Today’s launch, SingShot sends a shot across the bow at Fox Interactive Media by launching an aggressive pricing model. SingShot gives two weeks of free use to kSolo’s one week and charges $4.95/month for an annual subscription, $7.95/month for a quarterly subscription $9.95/month for a monthly subscription. kSolo charges $7.95/month for an annual subscription, $8.95/month for a quarterly subscription, and $9.95/month for a monthly subscription.

kSolo is well funded and starts with a larger userbase and song library, but the coming months will see who wins as these two slug it out.

Readers should also check out our coverage of Bix, a contest service that seems ideal for a mashup with these two song sites.

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Trackbacks/Pings (Trackback URL)

  1. GigaOM : » How Big Is Online Karaoke?
  2. TechCrunch Japanese アーカイブ » SingShot、オンラインカラオケ業界に参入

  3. Social Intelligence » Blog Archive » SingShot - share karaoke performances - Social Networking Watch List and Analysis
  4. nonsmokingarea.com » Blog Archive » karaoke 2.0
  5. EveryDigg » Blog Archive » SingShot Enters Online Karaoke Space
  6. Tech Industry » SingShot Enters Online Karaoke Space
  7. Pacificdave Blog » Tasty article dump
  8. Techcrunch » Blog Archive » Chinswing Brings Audio to Discussion Boards
  9. Chinswing Brings Audio to Discussion Boards at Swiss Podcast Directory and Blog
  10. Start-up.co.nz » Blog Archive » Chinswing Brings Audio to Discussion Boards
  11. Chinswing Brings Audio to Discussion Boards
  12. TechCrunch en français » EA avale le site de Karaoke SingShot
  13. SingShot Review - Online Karaoke Done Right : All Things Entertainment
  14. Two Years Later, MySpace Karaoke Launches

Comments

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  1. Keith L. Dick

    ***karaoke*** Bascially “Robs” a song of it’s lead Vocals so anyone can Sing Along…

    What it also does is remove any other voice or instrument in that same Frequency Range, thus making it sound Very and I mean Very *WIMPY*…

    What would be nice if a deal could be Struck where the original Masters could be obtained and re-mastered without the *Lead Vocals* leaving *All Other Tracks* Background Vaocals Also Intack…

    Then you would have something worthy of your time in a bar and drinking most of the night when you finally said Yes I wanna get up there and show off what Vocal Talents I do have…

    Go Figure….

  2. StephenZhai

    不错,不错。Excellent!

  3. John L

    I’ve been singing like a mad man for like 2 hours now.

  4. Fred

    I was unaware of this “online karaoke space” these companies are competing for. It seems like we’re getting to the point when the internet is so packed with things we can’t stand to see on TV that we’re going to need to get a whole new medium to get away from them again. I’m thinking newspapers, here.

  5. Axehole

    When you start talking about the “online karaoke space”, it makes us wonder if the Web 2.0 meme has jumped the shark……

  6. Matt muller

    We tried Ksolo and were a bit disappointed.

    I did notice another new online karaoke player with 7,000 songs which was Adobe’s site of the day a couple of weeks ago called http://www.internetkaraoke.net -excellent.

    It is also jukebox style with no registration or subscriptions, just pay as you go.

  7. Nick Gavronsky

    Cool product. Could be fun to use when you have a few drinks and have some friends over.

  8. FinnFinn

    I don’t get it? As a ksolo and karaoke enthusiast SingShot has done nothing but offer a smaller catalog and a fresh coat of paint. And ksolo is now part of Fox, which owns American Idol. So what’s so interesting?

  9. Dexter Zafra

    I tried both, but I prefered singshot.com because of its multi browser flash version. However with all these big karaoke sites out there, I still prefered old ways (sing-along style online). I can do air guitar…

  10. Toongsi

    Great

  11. Yakito

    Grate site tough I am not sure about how they plan to rise get big money