Web app Tubalr lets you quickly and easily mine YouTube
for music videos. Register with the site and you can also create custom,
sharable playlists.
A small music app named Tubalr took off this week when its developer posted about his app on Reddit,
asking simply, "It's not Pandora, Spotify, or Rdio... but it's
something I've been making the past 2 years. What do you guys think?"
Three days and more than 2,500 comments later, a side project that earns no revenue suddenly has a bright future. According to Cody Jack Stewart, the man behind the app, Tubalr "makes searching YouTube for your favorite artists/bands simple and quick." After using Tubalr today, I would have to agree.
While you can create playlists using YouTube itself, Tubalr gets you to your tunes more quickly. It automatically queues up a playlist based on your search term, stripping out much of the clutter you encounter on YouTube. When one video ends, the next one begins. And if you register for an account, you can can create your own custom playlists and also tell Tubalr never to play a particularly dreadful song again.
When you first arrive at Tubalr, you'll see a search box and two
buttons: Only and Similar. Enter a band or artist name and hit one of
the two buttons and a YouTube player will appear below and begin playing
a song based on your query. Below the player are links to the other
videos it found. You can skip forward and back through the playlist
Tubalr generated by using the Prev and Next buttons.
You can also search for multiple terms if you'd like to create a playlist on the fly that includes more than one artist (but without opening it up to similar artists). To multisearch, use a semicolon to separate your search terms and hit the Only button.
Sign up for an account and you can create custom playlists. After
registering, an Add to Playlist pull-down menu gets added below the
video player. Using the pull-down menu, you can create new playlists and
add the current song to any existing playlists. You can access your
playlists from the Your Playlists button at the top of the page. And
grab the URL for your playlists page to share them or you can share the
link for a particular playlist.
The other benefit of registering is that the Remove button permanently removes a song from a playlist Tubalr generated. Without registering, a song you don't like will show up the next time you search for that artist.
Three days and more than 2,500 comments later, a side project that earns no revenue suddenly has a bright future. According to Cody Jack Stewart, the man behind the app, Tubalr "makes searching YouTube for your favorite artists/bands simple and quick." After using Tubalr today, I would have to agree.
While you can create playlists using YouTube itself, Tubalr gets you to your tunes more quickly. It automatically queues up a playlist based on your search term, stripping out much of the clutter you encounter on YouTube. When one video ends, the next one begins. And if you register for an account, you can can create your own custom playlists and also tell Tubalr never to play a particularly dreadful song again.
You can also search for multiple terms if you'd like to create a playlist on the fly that includes more than one artist (but without opening it up to similar artists). To multisearch, use a semicolon to separate your search terms and hit the Only button.
The other benefit of registering is that the Remove button permanently removes a song from a playlist Tubalr generated. Without registering, a song you don't like will show up the next time you search for that artist.
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