eSnips, the first global social sharing site that lets its users to share, publish, promote or sell their own creations online announced today that close to a dozen new user-generated online music communities have been created, including Electronic, Hindi, Reggae, Metal, Gothic/Industrial, Hip-Hop/Rap, Elvis, Jazz, and Blues, as well as new Music Widgets, Players and Playlists that allow users to upload their own music, distribute and promote it on other sites.This new announcement follows the fast-growing DJ and Karaoke MicroPortal community launches in the last few months. In addition, eSnips is extending its FREE storage for existing and new users from 1 GB to 5 GB, which makes it a perfect one-stop site for music creators and lovers alike. With the use of eSnips widgets, musicians can now virally spread their music to sites and blogs other than their own, increasing the effectiveness of their distribution tenfold. Because music files are actually stored on eSnips, widgets can be created with only a few clicks from a variety of cool, genre-specific player and playlist styles without leaving the site.
" eSnips is about enabling people not only to share their passions but also to promote them. Our first step was to enable people to easily share their creations. The new music widgets will now provide people with an easy, viral, zero-cost way to promote their work across the web." - Yael Elish, CEO of eSnips
Another new feature that promotes music is eSnips customizable, animated email messages. Users can search for compelling music and send entire sets of songs and files they collect with one simple click. Not only do the new music widgets and playlists work together, but with email integrated as well, users can send their favorite songs to friends without the bandwidth issues of large email attachments.
This powerful combination of playlist and music creation makes hosting original music on eSnips incredibly appealing to musicians and those interested in hearing independent and user-generated music.Using widgets, YouTube and flickr enabled anyone to play video and share hosted photos on their sites and individual blogs.

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