Kompoz, a New Collaboration Workspace for Musicians


Kompoze - online music collaborationInteresting.  Kompoz released a beta version of an online workspace for musicians to collaborate in the creation of new recordings.  Think Apple’s GarageBand audio recording software meets MySpace Band pages, where the social network revolves around song projects.

Basically, anyone can start a new "song project", choosing project attributes such as song key, beats per minute, and an appropriate Creative Commons license.  Kompoz members can then add parts to the betterment (or detriment) of the project, and the whole work in progress is both streamable and downloadable by everyone, both as a whole or in parts.  Features include:

There’s also a "Private" setting, where only invited musicians are able to participate and collaborate, but it doesn’t seem to be enabled, currently.  This will be key, as many musicians will want to work with a set group of co-writers or band members.  Perhaps it’s a post-beta feature, or part of a ‘paid’ version of the service?  I’m also wondering if there will be a way to "mute" parts of the track…  If 50 people contribute parts, it could become a tad messy unless you’re able to select which tracks are being played back at any time.  Would a Creative Commons audio archive "search" module make sense here?  (I’ll add an update soon with the answers…)

It’s definitely a cool concept, and a nice feature set considering it’s free.  I’d love to give this a whirl, and have y’all join in…

Update:  Ralph at Kompoz confirmed that the "Private" function is currently disabled, but may become a paid feature.  More features are being added in a couple weeks.  We’ll wait and see…

March 12, 2007
      Musicians: Distribute Your Music to Millions      

Comments

It would be nice to see a similar thing for Cubase SX/SL users.

Looks really cool. To the previous comment posted, I don’t think it matters what software you use. This site works with an MP3, WAV, or WMA file.

I believe Jill is correct — this online application is independent of what software you use to create your audio, whether you use GarageBand, Cakewalk, Cubase, ProTools, etc. You just throw the audio in, and it incorporates it all into a mixed file.

This is pretty slick! Thanks for posting.

You bet, Mark, thanks for reading. It looks like a pretty cool service.

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