Karaoke app launched on iPhone, demoed on Android


The next-generation iPhone will launch soon, and development for it will only heat up, partially thanks to the $100 million iFund raised by Kleiner Perkins.

It comes as no surprise then, when a start-up that has little more than an application for jail-broken iPhones raises capital.

TuneWiki, an Israeli-based startup which launched in December 2007 by two former Israeli Defense Force fighter pilots, is raising a first round of funding from Benchmark Capital’s Israel Fund, we’ve heard, but it hasn’t gone through yet.

The company launched the iLyric Player in December(see video below), a karaoke-like application that synchronizes and scrolls lyrics, real time, in multiple languages (English, Hebrew, Japanese, and Korean). Users enjoy music on the iPhone, iPod touch, or a personal computer and in true Wiki fashion, all lyrics are user generated and edited.

Yesterday, the company posted a video (see demo here ) of the TuneWiki application, running on the Android platform emulator. The app for Android still plays music with the ability to play, edit and translate karaoke-like synchronized lyrics, subtitled on video and audio.

For Android, however, users can build a virtual media library that sits on the Android file system and can connect directly to YouTube, Yahoo Music, Imeem or a friend’s playlist.

With the increasing litigation against web companies by the RIAA and the publishers it protects, it’s surprising that such a young company like TuneWiki already has one of the big four in its pocket. This month the company signed a deal with Universal Music Publishing Group, allowing its lyrics to be legally viewed in North America. (Although the app obviously targets Israeli and Asian users, so I’m not sure what the ramification is for users outside North America).

The application is a featured application on the iPhone installer, but will most likely see legitimate release through the iPhone Apps store, as well as the stand-alone song lyric website.

We’re tracking down company founders Amnon Sarig and Rani Cohen and we’ll update with more information when we have it.

David Adewumi, a contributing writer with VentureBeat, is the founder & CEO of http://heekya.com a social storytelling platform billed “The Wikipedia of Stories.”

Next Story: Roundup: Sprint to announce a big wireless partnership, Sun previews JavaFX and more
Previous Story: Spot Runner raises $51M to expand self-serve TV ad business

Bookmark and Share

Tags: , ,

Photo of David Adewumi

About the Author, David Adewumi

David Adewumi, Founder and Chief Storyteller of http://heekya.com, leads the overall vision and product strategy for the start-up dubbed the ‘Wikipedia of Stories.’ For the past year, he has been a contributing writer for VentureBeat, with a focus on digital music and social start-ups. Previously, he led sales & product development for Lomic, Inc. an oil & natural gas software firm. David has served in the US Army as an Airborne Infantryman, before being appointed to the US Military Academy at West Point. He attended the Pennsylvania State University, where he pursued a degree in Economics.