Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

Microimage and Dialog: Changing Sri Lanka’s music industry

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Thaala, as we got to know, is first and foremost intended to be a gigantic store of all music produced in Sri Lanka – from Amaradeva to Clarence to the newest artist albums.

This bank can be accessed with a variety of devices – iOS and Android are first, but more are inbound, from a webbased solution to a Windows mobile app. For a monthly fee of Rs 99, users login with their mobile number or email – regardless of where they are – and are given the keys to what will become the single largest collection of Sri Lankan music in the world. You get to stream music directly to your mobiles – in fact, we got to test this out both before and after the launch of the apps and generally listen to your heart’s content.

The app in question, a whiteand-red affair vaguely reminiscen­t of the stock iOS music player, connects via 3G or Wi-FI to the songbase hosted on Dialog’s servers and pulls the list of tracks. Each track is streamed in 128kbps and streaming via 3G turned out to be surprising­ly fluid: try as we could, we couldn’t make it skip or lag.

Since it’s a huge collection, playlists come into play here (pun intended). You can handpick your favourites from the sea as is the norm – or, more importantl­y, you can let the app auto-generate a playlist for you. The playlist generator acts as a sort of insanely detailed search engine – for example, as Harsha demonstrat­ed, if you want love songs from the 60 s that were featured in movies - well, you tick the buttons and voila, a complete list of all that you specified pops up.

Even better: users can share playlists. In our interview, we were given a rudimentar­y sketch of a social network build around sharing playlists of Sri Lankan music, spread out across all major platforms.

As the network grows, you can create and share, privately or publicly, playlist of your creation, and others can share and listen to these. It’s not inconceiva­ble that some particular­ly talented users might evolve into mini-radio stations of their own right within the Thaala network.

Of course, something like this doesn’t pop up overnight. Dialog and the Microimage team have been at it for 12 months now. Surprising­ly, both companies went out on a limb, starting work without so much as a signed contract between each other: after months of back-and-forth, meetings, marketing, PR and the like, everything was finally set for public consumptio­n, with Microimage doing much of the coding and Dialog providing an extensive distributi­on platform (word is the service might come bundled with Dialog smartphone­s).

Even so, the current incarnatio­n is but a beta. Everything may change. The plan is for an equal revenue share once they’re got the content providers settled – right now they’ve g o t Torana and some other establishe­d brands, but they intend to target everybody, including indie artists.

“The challenge for indie music is that we’ll need a music partner to validate the music and the copyrights,“says Harsha with a grin. “But yes, we’re willing to go there. And if other telco’s are willing to join us? Like eZCash, we can make this a national network. The future’s here: what do you think?”

Source @ReadMe written by @yudhanjaya

 ?? ?? They could definitely use a cooler startup screen, though..
They could definitely use a cooler startup screen, though..
 ?? ?? Yes, Amaradeva’s in there, too.
Yes, Amaradeva’s in there, too.
 ?? ??

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