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September 18, 2008 9:39 AM PDT

Yahoo adds full-length music tracks to search results

by Josh Lowensohn
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It's been a good seven months since Yahoo killed off its own music service in favor of teaming up with RealNetworks' Rhapsody. The evolution of this partnership finally surfaced on Yahoo's search results late Wednesday evening. Now any time you do a search for an artist or song name you'll be able to play up to four of their tracks, in full length, right from the results. Previously the system only allowed for 30-second previews.

The updated service allows for up to 25 full-length plays per month, although users who sign up to be a part of Rhapsody's $13-a-month subscription service can get unlimited streaming plays. The music plays from the built-in Yahoo Media Player the company is calling FoxyPlayer. It automatically keeps track of how many plays you've had and includes shortcuts to the source album, lyrics, and artist page. Once you move off the page the player disappears, so if you want to keep listening you have to leave that window or tab open.

The music artist shortcut box that appears on the top of your search results now lets you play full-length songs, which works well on many major artists except Oasis, which for some reason is limited to karaoke tracks.

(Credit: CNET Networks)

In my testing I found the player to be excellent, however Yahoo's system is still fragmented. Using Yahoo's audio search still provides short samples that play without the benefit of the player, and the basic search does not always pick up your artists, despite them being in Yahoo Music's catalog.

In the case of a big band like Oasis the only full-length tracks available were karaoke samples; once played, they still counted toward the 25-song monthly cap. When I wanted to see other songs in the collection it hopped me over to the download page where you could only listen to 30-second samples, something that will be switching over to full-length tracks "soon" according to a post on Yahoo's search blog.

All of this jumping around is bound to be confusing to the average user unless they're looking for big-name bands. Going forward, the most powerful option is going to be a player that follows you from page to page and smarter recognition of band names that are pulled up when users are searching.

Update: Made a correction regarding the FoxyPlayer being related to technology from Foxytunes.

Josh Lowensohn writes for Webware.com, CNET's blog about Web applications and services. E-mail Josh, or follow him on Twitter at http://www.twitter.com/Josh.
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by benjaminstraight September 18, 2008 10:45 AM PDT
Cool. Good move by yahoo.
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by todd_rimes September 18, 2008 11:18 AM PDT
I love Yahoo! Music - in fact I work there - but let's set the record straight.

The statement "...Yahoo Media Player the company has renamed FoxyPlayer (in reference to its Foxytunes roots)" is not reality-based. It was my team of talented developers -- Mike Davis, Amit Behere, and William Khoe, and talented Y! Designers and Y! Product Managers, who produced Yahoo Media Player. It has absolutely no ancestry or origins in Foxytunes.

~Todd Rimes
Sr. Engineering Manager, Yahoo! Music
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by Josh.Lowensohn September 18, 2008 11:53 AM PDT
Sure thing--fixed & noted.
by Faye23 September 20, 2008 11:36 AM PDT
Todd, can you please clarify something for me? I am an avid fan of Yahoo! Music. For several months my schedule did not permit me to use it. I recently tried to run Yahoo! Music Launchcast and it was stuck on "Connecting to". Up until now, I believed that it was because I had renewed my Norton Internet Security (NIS). For the past 3 days I have been e-mailing them back and forth regarding how to fix this. I've set NIS to allow all transactions from Yahoo Messenger, and I have done everything NIS has told me to do to allow the application to run.

Are you telling me that this whole time Yahoo! Music Launchcast has been deactivated?! Please clarify and end my misery.
by Faye23 September 20, 2008 11:39 AM PDT
Todd, Sorry. I am referring to the Yahoo! Music Launchcast that is an add-on for Yahoo Messenger.
by ReVeLaTeD September 18, 2008 3:20 PM PDT
So...
If you record songs from this, is it considered piracy? Or fair use like a radio?

Hmm...
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