Gimado is
the latest to launch a music search engine, very
similar in function to
SeeqPod.
Crawling the web for mp3s, your search query will
return a list of results for songs that can be
played and downloaded. I played around on the site
for a while, and it looks that most of the content
available on Gimado is coming directly from
eSnips. As
with
most other sites that perform the same type of web
crawling for music search results, a good amount of
the content was completely unavailable. It would be
helpful to both users as well as Gimado if these
particular songs could be flagged.
To add a bit of a recommendation
system, songs can be rated on a star scale from 1 to
5, however, as there are no accounts or sections for
most popular songs, I’m not entirely sure where
these ratings come back into play. Based on what the
Gimado team has told me, however, there are several
plans for the music search engine that are being
developed right now–some of these will go towards
widgets, a contact importer, and the ability to save
songs in a playlist.

Another interesting direction Gimado plans on taking
is an ad revenue-sharing model, which will be a
50-50 split. This take on things is along the same
lines as
Songza,
which recently launched its own self-promotion
option for artists to participate in, essentially
getting the community more directly involved with
the success of the site and empowering artists and
members as well.
When it’s all said and done, though,
is Gimado merely setting itself up for a lawsuit
from Warner? The record label is already after
Seeqpod,
claiming the music search engine is acting as a
distributor. And as Gimado offers direct download
options, it too could be asking for trouble, given
the still uncertain climate of online music search,
distribution, licensing and play.
Visit:
Gimado