Collaborative music platform?
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- KVRer
- 2 posts since 23 Jul, 2024
Hello. I’m on the hunt for a music platform/app on which I can collaborate with other musicians. Heading to the studio and trying to liaise with 5 other band members is proving near to impossible! 
- KVRAF
- 14152 posts since 20 Nov, 2003 from Lost and Spaced
Bandlab is good for this. Haven't tried it, but it seems perfect for collabs.
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FranklyFlawless FranklyFlawless https://www.kvraudio.com/forum/memberlist.php?mode=viewprofile&u=586325
- KVRian
- 1091 posts since 24 Oct, 2022
Already answered in a duplicate thread:
Collaborative music platform? - Music Theory Forum - KVR Audio
Collaborative music platform? - Music Theory Forum - KVR Audio
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- KVRer
- 6 posts since 15 Dec, 2021
I tried bandlab briefly but can’t give you a definitive review. I abandoned the virtual collab thing after a few months. It helps that my friend and I have the same DAW and plugins, so we just share projects back and forth with notes.
5 people is going to be difficult no matter the solution imo. But experimenting and finding the work flow that suits all of your personalities and preferences the best is the most important, even if it’s not conventional. Maybe try bandlab and if that doesn’t work out, see what off-beat workflow can help with you guys.
5 people is going to be difficult no matter the solution imo. But experimenting and finding the work flow that suits all of your personalities and preferences the best is the most important, even if it’s not conventional. Maybe try bandlab and if that doesn’t work out, see what off-beat workflow can help with you guys.
- KVRAF
- 7412 posts since 8 Feb, 2003 from London, UK
If you want a DAW to work together on, sounds like BandLab.
If you're just looking for a space to get ideas down and recorded, it's pretty easy to spin up a Jamulus server with multitrack recording (Audacity and Reaper project support are built in) and then just get everyone to connect (preferably voice and instrument separately to keep the multi-track easier to handle).
If you're just looking for a space to get ideas down and recorded, it's pretty easy to spin up a Jamulus server with multitrack recording (Audacity and Reaper project support are built in) and then just get everyone to connect (preferably voice and instrument separately to keep the multi-track easier to handle).