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And a link just in case the forum crops the picture
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Which is all fine and good, but practically speaking, everybody needs to be playing off a metronome/drum machine/click or it falls apart quickly because you can’t make tempo adjustments based on what you’re hearing, because that adjustment will cause a ripple effect to other players.
Best case scenario right now is to have everyone slave off a drum machine, or possibly only the drummer has a click in his ear, and never strays off that. But having played with people my whole life, it’s difficult to resist the temptation to follow a bass player and abandon the click.
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Interesting. This kind of how I have been picturing it in my head. But then when you add more than 2 people?
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leeastone
Interesting. This kind of how I have been picturing it in my head. But then when you add more than 2 people?
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I agree there needs to be a heavy reliance on etiquette. So far my experience has been best when people are playing in a key as opposed to trying to play a “song”. Things end up just working if you don't think about what is happening too hard.
Playing to a click is not my strong point, I'm very much a lock in with the bassist guy. So yeah its been an interesting experience. Kind of ended up just playing bass myself to try and get a handle on how best to play with the whole interval loops setup.
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I've been playing drums to a click for a long time, it's a skill that improves your playing no matter the instrument. For Jammr, I try to find rooms that don't have a drummer, and I will follow the click religiously. If people aren't using a click, I'm going to follow it anyway until they fall in line, it takes an interval or two.
Captaincancel - the problem with drum machines is the MIDI clock from jammr is broken, so even if you set your machine to match the tempo, it's going to drift. Maybe for 2 or 3 players that might work for a while, but I've been on sessions where it completely falls apart because the drum machine eventually is not in sync with the interval.
Which gets me to another important point. I regularly join jams where people are playing progressions (ie 12 bar blues) that don't align with the interval. This usually means that every other interval, the guitar and the bass are playing different chords. If people are following a drummer or a drum machine, and not paying attention to the click or interval, then they may think everything sounds great because they're playing in sync to what they hear, but what's getting sent to everyone else is all over the place.
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Unfortunately I heard that happen waaaay too many times today. Concept proved and accepted.
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julian_vickers
Unfortunately I heard that happen waaaay too many times today. Concept proved and accepted.
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eb_liveDrumsI migrated between bass and sax today.
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Ok so that's interesting: does the interval determine the rate at which you receive audio? i.e. if something is delayed by 30ms (interface + Internet), does Jammr take that into account and bump the packets to the next interval?
I figured if a constant stream of 100% accurate drumming was fed into the room, regardless of where it came from, everyone would eventually hear it, so could play along.
I most definitely have experienced in time jamming coming from various drum machines, but you're right, the interval might've been out, or they were just jamming in a key of A minor, so the intervals weren't as important.
The problem with the room click is it gets drowned out pretty easily once a few people jump in with loud instruments and if it's not loud for me, I have a hard time following it, especially if there are other guys that are close, but not on, so now you're fighting against it.
Most definitely need to practice my click-playing anyways, so why not do it with Jammr while I'm cooped up?
Edited captaincancel (April 19, 2020 13:21:55)
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