Hello Connectedville,
Here's another product review for you. This time I'll take a look at the new open source music player Songbird. Will it be the music player that overthrows iTunes? Read on and decide for yourself.
Summary
Songbird is an open source music player created by some of the minds behind Winamp and Yahoo! Music Search. As an open source project, Songbird has encouraged the development community to create add-ons and integrate services, and so far the features have been pretty impressive, especially since the player is available for free. In general, music players are fairly basic and are not expected to do much more than manage and play MP3s, but Songbird’s ability to transfer files to and from an iPod, provide rich information about artists and act as a download manager for online content puts it on another level.
Strengths
- Runs on Windows, Linux and Mac
- Large selection of Add-ons
- Integration with online services (Flickr, YouTube and more)
- Free!
- Apple iPhones, iPod Touch and Microsoft Zune devices are not yet supported
- No UPnP or DLNA support
- Music only player, no video
- Crashed often
- No CD ripping
Free, open source – donations are requested
Description
Songbird is an open source music player created by some of the minds behind Winamp and Yahoo! Music Search. As an open source project, Songbird has encouraged the development community to create add-ons and integrate services, and so far the features have been pretty impressive, especially since the player is available for free.
Downloading and install was fairly painless – the download was 11.7 MB, and upon install, full scan of my files only took about 7 minutes (~6500 tracks). At first glance, Songbird is very similar to iTunes with a navigation tree, a cover-flow view, data based track listing, album art pane and player controls at the bottom. As a matter of fact, in the world of music players these basic features and controls have become standard, and Songbird would not be relevant if it didn’t have these components. I can say that Songbird delivers a very competent set of basic features and they all made sense in functionality and usability.
What makes Songbird stand out from the competition are the add-ons and service integration. Integrated services include Flickr photos, YouTube videos, Last.fm artist data and SHOUTcast radio. Add-ons include lyrics, Media-Flow (cover-flow view), browser-based searching (Google & Hypemachine.com), iPod support and more.
At first glance I was afraid the amount of add-ons and integrated services would make for a sluggish experience, but that was not the case at all. Unlike the latest cumbersome version of Winamp, Songbird loads fast, navigates through a large library quickly, plays and skips between tracks quickly, and the browser based applications move fast as well.
The list of add-ons and features is very large, so I focused on a small set of these for this review, choosing what I thought were the most relevant and desirable for the average user.
mashTape
The first add-on I downloaded for Songbird was mashTape, which is a combination of various online services and content. These are presented as tabs in a moveable pane. This was a real treat. Upon the playing of any specific track in my library I could check out the mashTape pane, which displayed:
- Artist bio, discography and related links from Last.fm
- Related album/artist reviews from Amazon editors and users
- Related artist news from Google, Digg and The Hype Machine (a music blog aggregator)
- A photo stream of user generated content from Flickr
- Related artist videos from YouTube
All of the links in any review or bio were clickable and brought up a browser within the application. This was especially great in the case of a blog article that included MP3 files. Not only could I read the blog, but another pane appeared that displayed a download manager and all the tracks that appeared in that particular blog. I could double click one of those tracks for immediate playback, or even better, click the “download” link and add it to my library! This was my favorite Songbird feature but one that I can see them eventually getting in trouble for – so I’m enjoying it while it lasts.
Album Art
The album art add-on is simple, but very useful. Using the Last.fm database, the album art for the currently playing track will appear in a separate pane. This was great for songs that I did not have album art for. If I ran across an “art-less” track, all I needed to do was drag and drop the image from the album art pane to the “drag album art here” pane – problem solved! The only draw back to this feature was that the Last.fm image was fairly small pixel wise, so it tended to be blurry if shown in a large view.
LyricMaster
The LyricMaster add-on was another great addition. Using data from two lyrics sites, Lyricsplugin.com and Lyricwiki.org, LyricMaster would find the lyrics for the currently playing library track and post them in a separate pane. This worked for most of my library. It also allowed me to add lyrics to the meta-data of any specific library track – then marking the track with a small icon as having lyrics in my list view. If lyrics were not found, an option was presented to search for them via Google in the player’s browser. This worked well to find missing lyrics, but there was no obvious way to add them to the lyrics pane.
Concert Info
Songbird also has an available add-on that provides local concert listings using data from SongKick. The add-on has an area for entering your city and state, and then local listings are available through clicking “concerts” on the left-hand navigation tab. Clicking the “buy tickets” link for the artist takes you to SongKick’s page where you can jump to either Ticketmaster or StubHub to make the purchase. Although the listings are a little light, seemingly only listing the major events in any given city, it is still a nice value add.
iPod Support
iPod support is an obvious add-on considering the popularity of the player, but it is not always done well (Media Monkey has put a plague of issues upon my iPod many times). My iPod synced quickly and it was easy to manage my playlists, edit met-data and add/remove tracks from the player. Editing meta-data did not create any weird doubling of data on my iPod (a common Media Monkey bug). A very nice facet of this add-on was the ability to copy tracks from the iPod to my desktop – iTunes does not even have this capability! However, not everything was peachy with this add-on. If I tried to copy too many tracks at one time, Songbird would crash. Also, changes made to album art through Songbird were not always showing up on the iPod, and in one case artist/song/album info changes appeared on a different track!?! Overall though, it is more important to me to be able to move tracks freely between my iPod and desktop, than to have album art for all tracks.
Conclusion
In my book, any application that’s free starts out in a positive light. After all, there’s got to be something about the product that’s worthwhile, and if it’s not a totally great piece of software, who cares? There was no money lost on it. The great thing about Songbird is that it starts from that point and soars upward in value. Sure, there are some bugs and it crashes more that Winamp or iTunes, but the software is still relatively new. By making Songbird open source, add-ons are coming in daily – I only tried a few but was very pleased with the usefulness. In general, music players are fairly basic and are not expected to do much more than manage and play MP3s, but Songbird’s ability to transfer files to and from an iPod, provide rich information about artists and act as a download manager for online content puts it on another level. I look forward to explore more of the currently available add-ons and can’t wait to see what’s coming next – I just hope they don’t get sued out of existence for content licensing issues.
Other Reviews for Songbird
CNET – 4/5 Stars
“…still a bit buggy, it's also a very fun app that's part music player, part Web browser, and all about music discovery, management, and playback.”
TechRadar.com
“…if you like the idea of a skinnable, customizable media player that combines your music library with the top online music services, then Songbird 1.0 should be winging its way to your PC.”