Facebook’s new app Bars will let you rap on premature beats

Despite being an annoying hipster, I certainly didn’t see it coming one: Facebook is Release an app Which will allow users to post and share rapping videos on Beats, which are provided by the app (Via Techcrunch) Belongs to.

The application is called Bars, and its main selling point is the beats it provides and lets you create 60-second rap videos on top of them. According to Techcrunch, You can then post the video to a TicTalk-style feed, where people can watch it and mark it as “fire” (that is, if your skills are equal). The app also promises “studio quality vocal effects”, including genuine, honest-to-good autotune. I hope there is a slider that goes from “deactivate my voice” to “t-pain”.

The app also promises an auto-dictionary dictionary for those who mark themselves as “beginners” in the app’s sign-up. For those close to the “advanced” level, it also promises a freestyle mode, which gives you eight random words to work with in a 16-time off-the-cuff wrap.

Do you have anything less?

If you’re itching to lay some bars, I have some bad news: The application currently appears to be in closed beta, but you can at least sign up to secure your username and when If the app starts opening then there can be space for it. UP

I promise you, the bars will never be ready for me.

Hopefully, this is not an indication of the quality you can expect from auto-rhyme suggestions.

I’m going to be honest, I don’t understand why erm, bar are so weak in the description of the App Store. Rape announcement posted on Instagram Honestly not bad?

The app promises that it will deliver beats ready to rap for you professionally, and if the examples posting this on Instagram are indicative of overall quality, then this may indeed be the case. They come closer to what you hear in an actual song than the embarrassing things posted on SoundCloud. (No, I’m not linking it.)

The app is being created by Facebook’s New Product Experimentation Group, which also released a similar music app called Collab last year, which allows musicians to create songs together, each providing different parts. . After scrolling through that app, my expectations for Bars have dropped slightly, as the audio quality is not near the level that Bars promises to interview. That said, I can see that Bars is able to fix his EQ, as it would really only have to deal with the human voice and not from an infinite range of devices.

So far, the application is Only on iOS, And I will not hold my breath for the Android version; Collab does not appear to have made it to the Play Store yet. For as much fun as I have, however, I will actually keep this app until it lets me in – so I can’t really contribute (not goodness) but so I can see that what do people do.

Facebook was not immediately available for comment.

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