Fun Stuff Friday: Turntable.fm and the new Social Music Experience
A few months ago, I wrote about two services that let you share music legally. Since that time, the social music scene has continued to grow with the launch of numerous new services. In particular, the release of Spotify in the States and the launch of Turntable.fm have generated significant online buzz. Each are still in beta-invite phase, but if one of your Facebook friends is on Turntable (chances of this are good) you can use the service now.
For those unfamiliar with these services, Spotify is a more social version of the personal music library with a pricing structure revolving around music licensing rather than ownership. On the other hand, Turntable is an entirely new service that takes the concept of social music to a whole new level; here’s how:
Service Structure
After logging into Turntable users see a list of numerous rooms they can join to listen to music; rooms with your friends in them are displayed at the top of the list. Songs are played in turn by five DJs, and anyone can step up and play music from their own library if there are less than five people DJing. Users that aren’t DJing hang out in the room and listen to music together. This structure creates a more social music experience than users will find elsewhere.
Social Features
Perhaps the most social aspect of Turntable is rating songs selected by DJs. At any point in the song, you can rate it as “awesome” or “lame.” Ratings from everyone in the room are aggregated to a “room vote,” when this rating falls too low the song is skipped. Crowdsourcing the approval of song selection to listeners motivates DJs to play songs they think listeners will enjoy, not just tracks they want to hear. If you’re especially impressed with a person’s music selection you can connect with them by becoming their fan. Adding to this social experience is an embedded group chat for people to suggest music, request to DJ, or talk about anything else they like.
Platform Integration
When you hear a song you enjoy, float your mouse over its title and six buttons will appear that allow you to add or find the song in multiple music services. The first button is naturally for Turntable, but is accompanied by external links to Amazon MP3, iTunes, Last.fm, Spotify, and Rdio. By integrating these other music services (some more social than others) into their interface, Turntable ensures that you can easily legally acquire new music you discover while listening with friends, fans, and DJs.
These various features make Turntable a very unique music platform that creates an entirely new way to listen to music. Rather than just discovering new music from your friends, Turntable lets you listen to new music with your friends, which will make your music experience more social and more fun!
If you’ve tried Turntable.fm we’d love to hear your thoughts on it! If you’re using another social music service, what do you like most about it?


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