leeastone
Interesting. This kind of how I have been picturing it in my head. But then when you add more than 2 people?
It doesn't really change anything: when the the new arrival's stream reaches them, they just have to listen, to figure out what's going on before playing.
Honestly, good jam etiquette is kind of universal. If you've ever been to Jam Nights and/or sat in with bands, particularly improv settings, you know to:
- Just listen for a while; turn your volume down and start simple. With Jammr, you have the luxury of turning off Send and turning on Direct Monitoring (or whatever routing you can do so you can hear, but they can't, if you're in the box with VSTis, etc.);
- solo when it's your turn: with a wink or a nod, or least wait until the other soloist is finished before coming in; difficult to do when you don't have eye-contact, but less is more as always, and if there isn't a solo for an interval, so be it.
In my limited experience so far with Jammr sessions (~10 hours), here's what I've noticed: when I was the room “tempo leader” and had a drum machine going (and ignored the room click/room interval), people – who can play on time – were able to hone in and play along pretty well, because when my sound arrived at their headphones, they heard a rock-solid drum machine and just started playing off of that.
As far as musical progressions, that really depended on the experience of the players and having someone pipe up on their microphone and say “ok guys, this is in A minor and goes like this…” at which point the better players would listen and start playing along.
Honestly, some etiquette could go a long way to “fix” the seemingly “technical” issues with Jammr. Even if we transported all the room participants magically to a room somewhere, there's a good chance that it'll fall apart of the players aren't listening to each other…
… which leads me to my point about following the robotic overlord for timing: it has been a challenge (for me, anyways) to stay locked into the click source for long periods of time if I'm playing e-drums along with it, because your attention is constantly being challenged by other players that are “close” but not quite “on” with the click: you start hearing a bass line that's close, but maybe a little late/behind on the beat (which is a totally normal thing and where I usually live with the music I play), and man, do I ever want to kill the click at that point and just follow that sexy bass!
Good video hear talking about it:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UB_G32rKNS0Now I'm not the best click player: I've spent way too long playing off of bass players, feeding off of each other, being in the pocket together, speeding up when it felt right, slowing down when it felt right too. That is going to be a challenge for me, to do that, but with a click going.
I might try the next jam with a click source in my ear only, and see how that goes; at the very least, it's good practice for me and I've been spending more time off of Jammr and practicing against a click source.