Perform and record in synchrony from multiple locations over the internet

Making music online in real-time is possible! Because Groovesetter uses direct peer-to-peer uncompressed sound, when using reliable high-speed internet, the latency between groovers located roughly 400 miles apart can be as low as 10 milliseconds.
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Making music online in real-time is possible! Because Groovesetter uses direct peer-to-peer uncompressed sound, when using reliable high-speed internet, the latency between groovers located roughly 400 miles apart can be as low as 10 milliseconds. When groovers are connecting over a wide area internet network, the time it takes for the audio signal to travel from one computer and to reach another computer will depend on the network connection between the connecting groovers and the distance the signal must travel over the internet wire.

REMOTE RECORDING YOUR PERFORMANCE IN LOGIC PRO X

Remote recording from multiple locations in LA
Remote recording with Logic Pro

The song "I Keep Falling" performed by Leah Finkelstein (guitar and vocals), Heather Steward (vocals), and Sharon Jackson (strings), was recorded remotely in real-time by sound engineer Kevin Dietz. All performers were connecting from remote locations around Los Angeles within a radius of fifty miles. Peer-to-peer latency between everyone joining was less than ten milliseconds. All incoming signals from each performer were routed to the sound engineer, who used an aggregate device combining a Motu audio interface with a virtual sound card for the Session I/O device to route each feed on separate tracks in Logic Pro X.

Host Routing

Recording engineer routing
Recording in Logic Pro X

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