Krista Swanson: Tech Mummy

Jun
04
2012

MyMusic.com Brings Life To Music

Service gives you a deeper look at your favourite bands

I am an audiophile. It’s no secret that the reason our YMC music blogger Consuelo and I became friends is because of our shared passion for all things musical. If you follow Connie, myself or Kat on twitter you'll notice Mondays and Tuesdays are #musicmonday and #tunesday and we share our love of music to everyone via song sharing on that day.

I love music and everything about it. I love the stories of how bands make it or break it, I love introspective band photography, and I love concert reviews. This is why I love the latest music service by Ottawa, Ontario and London, UK based Mymusic.com (currently in beta).

Mymusic.com is like a living, breathing copy of Rolling Stone Magazine, but better.

Searching for a band brings you to their discography, links to YouTube videos and news, tour schedule and more. It’s how a band wishes they were promoted to the world.

I tested the service by searching for three Canadian bands: The Weakerthans, The Tragically Hip, and Les Trois Accords. While services such as Last FM and Grooveshark bring up a few songs to play, Mymusic.com brought up photos, Wikipedia info, event listings, lyrics, and bands that are similar, making my search an experience instead of just a listing of songs.

The site is so sleek and engaging I had a hard time picking a single screenshot to show here. What I wanted to show was how Mymusic.com brings life to an artist.

mymusicdotcom_screenshot

Sexy right? And this screenshot doesn't do it justice.

My only complaint about the site so far (and it really is a minor one) is that they have a points system that is similar to the way FourSquare and other social networking sites work. You get points for searching, tweeting, watching videos etc. I really wish I could turn this off because I find the pop ups when you reach an achievement really annoying.

Minor inconveniences aside, I can see myself spending a lot of time on this site, and I can’t wait to see how the content for all of these artists grows over the next few months.

If I was a band or artist, the first thing I’d be doing tomorrow morning is making sure my name appears in the search at Mymusic.com because it’s going to be big.