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LyricWiki (also known as Lyrically or LyricWikia) was an online wiki-based lyrics database and encyclopedia. [2] In March 2013, it was the seventh largest MediaWiki installation [3] with over 2,000,000 pages including 1.5 million songs. [4]
Lyrics Music website that has established itself as a go-to platform for finding lyrics. Musixmatch: Lyrics Audio based music recognition and provision of song lyrics. Yes. SecondHandSongs: Covers User-generated database of covers and samples of songs, with links to public recordings. >1,100,000 performances >100,000 works Multilingual recordings.
This page was last edited on 22 October 2020, at 16:02 (UTC).; Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License; additional terms may apply.
Wiser originally created the list as a database to prepare for his radio programs but then he posted it online. It was initially used mainly by DJs, but in 2002 it was chosen as a "Yahoo! Pick". [16] [13] [17] The August 2004 issue of Men's Journal listed Songfacts as one of the "100 Best Websites for Guys". [18]
Musixmatch has a free, public database where lyrics are displayed. To contribute to the database, users can sign up and contribute lyrics, synchronizations, translations, and structuring to get points and move up levels. Musixmatch's points have no redeemable value, but are instead a marker of a particular user's contributions.
The International Lyrics Server was a Swiss website from February 1997 to January 1999, set up by Pascal de Vries to host crowdsourced song lyrics at the site lyrics.ch. By the time it was closed, it hosted over 100,000 songs and received a million pageviews per day.
Do not analyze, synthesize, interpret, or evaluate lyrics yourself; instead, refer to reliable secondary sources that do so. To be included, works ought to fit into the framework of notability . In general, a song from a b-side to a minor band shouldn't be included (see also Wikipedia:Notability (music) and deletion policy ).
Interpolation is prevalent in many genres of popular music; early examples are the Beatles interpolating "La Marseillaise" and "She Loves You", among three other interpolations in the 1967 song "All You Need Is Love", [3] and Lyn Collins interpolating lyrics from the 5 Royales' "Think" in her similarly titled 1972 song "Think (About It)".