To many of us, music making is something fundamental. We sing, we play, and more often than not, we want to do it together. It isn’t always easy. Most musicians have to make major sacrifices to fund
JackTrip Labs, a Silicon Valley-based remote music making platform, has named Lee Ellison chief strategy adviser. A growing startup, JackTrip Labs has partnered
JackTrip Virtual Studio, an innovative platform developed by JackTrip Labs that enables users to play music together remotely, is now available in more than fifty regions around the world.
The company has teamed up with cloud provider Amazon Web Service, which recently launched local zone service in Miami, Houston, and Boston, allowing user access in those regions to JackTrip s fully managed audio servers where thousands of singers, choruses, bands, music teachers, and more currently use the game-changing technology to teach, create, and perform music together in real time from remote locations.
Combining the latest in audio and edge computing, JackTrip Virtual Studio has expanded beyond its initial use as a user-friendly platform for music groups to rehearse and perform together in real time while isolated. Says JackTrip Labs CEO Mike Dickey, Our technology was originally developed during the pandemic as a platform for choirs, who had discovered they were unable to sing together