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January 30, 2007 4:01 AM PST

eJamming: Skype for musicians

EJamming, which makes software that enables people to practice music together if their instruments are MIDI-enabled, is announcing a service that works for non-MIDI instruments too: drums, guitars, voice, violins, etc. The idea is to let musicians practice together even when they can't get together physically, or to let students and teachers work together remotely.

There are really interesting technical challenges to making this work. Not only do you have to transmit very high-quality audio, but you have to do it with extremely low-audio latency. The eJamming founders, Alan Glueckman and Gail Kantor, told me their audio processor and P2P technology solves these issues, and they're going to demo their new product on Wednesday at the Demo 07 conference.

But eJamming can't break the laws of physics or go faster than the network it's running on, and it's the first online service I've heard of with geographic constraints. Even with a fast connection, Glueckman and Kantor don't recommend the service for people separated by more than a few hundred miles.

Glueckman says he had his cousin, Aerosmith drummer Joey Kramer, in mind when he built this product. The idea being that Aerosmith can still have rehearsals when one or more band members are out of town. Kramer hasn't yet tried the product, Glueckman told me. I also ran this idea by my wife, who plays in a string quartet. She scoffed at it, since so much of performing, rehearsing, and teaching, she said, depends on subtle visual and personal cues that can't be transmitted over a network. The eJamming team hopes to add video to the product at some point.

I can see this working, though, for occasional rehearsals and for informal jamming. There's also a social-network angle to the service, which helps musicians find each other.

The service will go into beta in a few weeks. However, the cost of the service may limit its uptake: It's $15 a month. Per band member. That means a four-member band will have to shell out $720 a year to use it.

Are you a musician? What do you think of this idea?

By the way, at last year's Demo, iGuitar showed off a cool USB guitar [see video].

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Add a Comment (Log in or register) 3 comments
eJamming: About time
by daneskov February 1, 2007 8:49 PM PST
I am a guitarist of 30 years. I actually envisioned such a web service for musicians a year ago from my hotel room on business travel.I think it is a great idea and one whose time has come. Though I do agree that optimal collaboration depends on visual connections, I can tell you that I have been in a number of bands where the members were spread out, even if only across a 50 mile radius, and would benefit from this type of service. In fact, I was supposed to have had band practice tonight but it was cancelled due to snow. If we were all members of this service, we might have practiced anyway. I also like the idea of being able to jam with other musicians.

If I couldn't have launched this myself, I am just glad someone is!
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by johngraham9 February 23, 2008 5:25 PM PST
Our band has just finished its latest CD and instead of pressing it on a CD we released it on a flash drive direct

We were really stoked with the results and wondered if anyone else had anything to say about this new technology. It seems we cannot find enough fans at the gigs to buy a CD but lots were willing to shell out $15 bucks for a 1 GB Flash...has anyone else found this to work for them?

I read this Billboard.com release http://billboardpublicitywire.com/releases/flash/drive/prweb530039.htm
and it convinced me if the labels are dropping the CD perhaps this was the next thing...?

Thoughts
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