Sound platform and mixer Razz lets users create their own sounds and tunes for their mobile phone or blog. With Razz Tones users can mix their voice with sound effects and music to create crazy ringtones.
The Razz Mixer lets you mix music, sound fx, movie clips, jokes and the like which can then be placed on your Myspace profile or wherever you wish. Finally there’s Razz Calls which allows callers to insert soundbites into their phone conversations. If you want Mr. T or any other character to make an appearance in your call you’ll have to pay; however, first call’s on the house. Additionally Razz features a stockpile of sounds and tunes that are ready to go; you can choose from props, disses, risqué, shoutouts, and wtf. These too have a price tag, but you can make your own sounds for free.
Razz.com In Their Own Words
“Razz, Inc. is a global publisher of entertainment software and services for mobile phones and other voice communication platforms. The Company’s proprietary audio distribution channel, the Razz, enables consumers to mix sound content into their phone conversations and onto their personal web pages. Leveraging this patent-pending technology, mobile content distributors can now offer their consumers a new voice-centric entertainment service, and content owners can further monetize their branded properties. With the company’s flagship mobile handset application, the Razz Player™, consumers can interject stored sound clips into live conversations, outgoing messages and voicemail. In short, the Razz provides a complete publishing and distribution solution for this new category of media: “in call entertainment”.”
Why Razz.com It Might Be A Killer
With mobile use skyrocketing, the market is ripe for customized sounds and ringtones. After all phone usage is becoming more and more recreational; teenagers use their phones to chat with their friends, while the older crowd surf the net or play games. Razz mixes things up a little and provides some fun entertainment.
Some Questions About Razz.com
Razz isn’t alone in its field. Will users really flock to create their own silly ringtones? Can they upload their own songs/sounds to remix? Will users be compelled to use the service based on their sounds alone?








