DJs and KJs:
Display your karaoke list on singers' phones
& receive song requests.
Used in over 100 countries.
FREE 30 Day Trial
(no credit card required)...
Kiosk Instructions:
Click the 'Browse' button to browse by letter, or enter an artist or title and hit SEARCH →
When you find your song, click the SING button next to it:
Hit F11 to fullscreen your browser, then Ctrl+ (or command+ on Macs) to enlarge the kiosk until you are happy with the size.
Then click the HIDE button above to replace these instructions with a "Quick Start' guide for your singers.
ctrl + alt + h takes you out of kiosk mode and back to the home screen
| FREE for the public to see & request your songs on their phone or your walk-up Kiosk. |
| Set up your song book with our FREE desktop app - SongbookDB Pal. |
| Receive song requests live on your phone or tablet with our Requests Hoster app, on your laptop with SongbookDB Pal, or in PCDJ™ Karaoki or MTU Hoster®: |
Go to songbookdb.com or scan the QR code below.
Once there, tap the INSTALL button.
But here is what no one tells you about a four-year breakdown: the bottom has a floor. Not a soft one. Not a kind one. But a floor. Mikoto did not emerge victorious. She emerged different. The breakdown didn’t make her stronger—it made her stranger. More patient with silence. Less impressed by urgency. She learned to measure a good day not by achievements but by whether she remembered to eat lunch.
She stopped calling home. She stopped eating with others. At night, she would sit in the dark of her studio apartment, watching the red blink of the smoke detector, timing her breaths to its rhythm. By the second year, the structure of her life began to shift. Mikoto missed deadlines for the first time. She’d stare at her research data until the numbers blurred into abstract symbols. Her mentor, concerned, suggested leave. Mikoto laughed—a hollow, percussive sound—and worked harder. mikoto's four-year breakdown
Her diary from this period is sparse. One entry reads only: “I am not here.” Another: “Took three hours to decide whether to shower.” The girl who once debated philosophy at dinner now struggled to answer yes-or-no questions. Year three was quiet in the worst way. Mikoto stopped fighting. She withdrew from the fellowship quietly, without explanation. Back home, she slept fourteen hours a day. Friends assumed she was recovering. In truth, she was waiting—for what, she couldn’t say. But here is what no one tells you
The breakdown didn’t end. It transformed. Mikoto still has her bad days. But now she knows: a four-year breakdown doesn’t break you if you finally stop counting the years. If this resonates with you or someone you know, consider reaching out to a mental health professional or a trusted support network. You are not your breakdown. But a floor
When people ask her what happened during those four years, she has a single answer: “I stopped pretending I was fine. And then I had to learn what ‘fine’ actually meant.”
She lost fifteen pounds she didn’t have to lose. Her hair thinned. She stopped reading entirely—she, who had once devoured a book a day. Some weeks, the only words she spoke were to a grocery cashier: “Thank you. You too.”
To the outside world, Mikoto was untouchable. A genius by eighteen, poised, articulate, and seemingly built from polished steel. But breakdowns rarely announce themselves with sirens. They arrive in whispers—a skipped meal, a sleepless week, a laugh that ends a half-second too late.