Have you ever wanted a looper pedal without the hassle of extra gear or downloads? Our web app lets you record and layer audio tracks directly in your browser. It's a 100% free tool, perfect for guitarists and bass players who want to practice, compose, and experiment with music effortlessly.
Our tool was designed to give you the best possible experience, with unique features that make it stand out:
Our tool is perfect for practicing, composing, or just having fun with music. We're always working on new features to make your experience even better — next up: saving and exporting your loops.
I play at my desk — the same desk I work at. There's always a small pedal plugged into the computer (a Line 6 POD Express or a ToneX One, depending on the week), so picking up the guitar between tasks takes zero setup. That convenience is the whole reason I play as much as I do.
I also own a proper hardware looper, a DigiTech JamMan. I almost never use it. It needs its own power supply and two more cables across the floor, and by the time everything is plugged in, the idea I wanted to loop has usually left the building. A looper you have to set up is a looper you don't use.
For a while my desk amp was a first-generation Positive Grid Spark 40. When Positive Grid launched their new Spark with a built-in looper, I caught myself seriously considering a whole new amp — mostly for that looper. Instead, since I build software for a living, I built the looper myself: one that lives in the browser I already have open, permanently "plugged in". It turned out genuinely useful, so I published it.
One opinion you'll see reflected all over this site: I think a looper is the best pedal you can buy, because it's one of the few pieces of gear that makes you a better player instead of just a different-sounding one. It exposes your timing, your voicings and your arrangement habits — mercilessly. That argument deserves its own article — and now it has one: why a looper makes you a better player.