What themed karaoke covers
A themed night is built around a clear idea, such as Halloween, costumes, a movie, an artist, a decade, a genre, or a music scene. A genre night may focus on country, metal, K-pop, Broadway, anime, or another style.
Find a night built around the songs, artists, eras, and scenes you already love.
The quick version
The essentials for choosing the right show.
The song choices focus on a clear theme, genre, artist, era, movie, or music scene.
Fans who already love the theme, groups planning a fun night out, and newcomers who want an easy starting point.
Read the exact theme, whether songs are restricted, and whether costumes are optional or required. Check the event details to be sure.
Choose a city or area to see matching shows there.
These recurring shows launched within the last 30 days. “New” refers to the show itself, not when it was added to KaraokeCrowd.
This karaoke format is already selected. If you chose an area, it carries over too.
Matching event dates over the next 60 days.
A closer look
Shows vary. Check the event details for the format, rules, and sign-up before you choose.
A themed night is built around a clear idea, such as Halloween, costumes, a movie, an artist, a decade, a genre, or a music scene. A genre night may focus on country, metal, K-pop, Broadway, anime, or another style.
Some hosts limit the available songs to the theme. Others keep the full catalog and add featured rounds, decorations, prizes, or suggestions. Costumes may be welcome without being required. Check the event details before relying on your usual song.
Look for the exact theme in the title and description. Some nights limit the available songs, while others keep the full catalog and add featured rounds, decorations, prizes, or costumes. Check what is encouraged, required, or simply there for fun before choosing your song.
Every show runs a little differently. Use these answers as a guide, then check the current event details or ask the organizer before you go.
Sometimes. Some hosts restrict the song list, while others keep the full catalog and use the theme for suggestions, decorations, or special rounds.
Usually not unless the event says it is required. Many themed nights encourage costumes without making them a condition of entry.
You can still watch, cheer, or choose a familiar song from the available catalog. You do not need to be an expert to join the night.
Read the event description and any examples from the host, then pick a song with a connection the crowd will understand. Have a backup choice in case your first song is unavailable or already taken.
Yes. Some recurring nights choose a new theme for each date, so check the specific event instead of relying on an older listing or poster.
Not automatically. A theme describes the music or presentation; a competition needs separate rules for entering, judging, and choosing winners.