Jammit (free beta software, $1-$5 per song) is a great tool for the budding or working musician looking to learn classic cover tunes quickly.Every song you load into Jammit is a real recording of a popular song, but instead of having to pick the instrument or vocal out of the mix with just your ear and brain, you can solo it, remove it, turn it down. You can also see the sheet music for the part right in front of you.Once you've loaded a song in Jammit, you'll see multiple copies.
Jammit helps you find out what music is made of. You can isolate or remove an instrument from the mix & jam with the original multi-tracks. The audio for the individual instruments and voices heard on your favorite songs was recorded separately before being blended into the final mix. Jammit wants to assist in this approach by allowing musicians to play along with their favorite songs, and to.
Each is mixed (or de-mixed) especially for one instrument or the vocals. Load the version for the part you're interested in learning and have at it. You can switch between notation and tablature (for guitar and bass parts), and there's drum notation as well.Jammit was born on iOS/OS X, and the interface is quite clean, informative, and easy to use.The mixer is the magic in Jammit as it lets you vary the volume of the band, isolate instruments and vocals, and add in a click track.The transport controls let you halt playback, slow it down to a pre-determined tempo (90 percent through 50 percent of the original tempo) without changing pitch, and jump back through the song in sections. There's also a record feature so you can hear what your own licks sound like against the original song.For all its pluses, Jammit could still be better, especially for fast instrumentals.Slowing tempos beyond 50 percent doesn't sound great, but there are songs with fast passages where it would help.
Also, you can't simply load MP3 files to take advantage of the slowdown capabilities; you're limited to the processed tracks available in the Jammit store. These cost from $1 to $5.Jammit's song database is heavily slanted towards distinctive classic rock songs.If that sounds expensive, keep in mind that each track has royalties due and must be de-mixed and notated—no Little Feat, pun intended. (The library is heavily slanted towards classic rock and/or songs with distinctive licks)Quicktime Pro is very good for varying audio tempo and looping, and the free does it as well. Also, the Jammit PC help file is a bit weak in the beta I tested, but the interface is intuitive and the program rock solid in terms of performance. Jammit is also available for OS X and.I really wish there'd been a program like Jammit when I was a teenage bedroom guitarist. Instead I had to wear out my records and tapes.
Then again, I probably would've had to pick and choose: Buying tunes can get expensive quickly. But I can definitely think of quite a few I would've bought.Note: The 'Try it for free' button on the Product Information page takes you to the vendor's site, where you can download the latest version of the software.
Comments are closed.
|
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. Archives
March 2023
Categories |