JamKazam: Playing Chamber Music Over the Internet – For Real!

Left to Right: Valerie Matthews, Susan Alexander, Michael Casassa, Mike Garrahan

Is there a big, depressing hole in your life where playing music with other people used to be?  There was in mine, but in April I was fortunate enough to be pointed to JamKazam, and I’m now as busy playing chamber music as I was pre-pandemic. I know, you’re skeptical.  But unlike Zoom and Acapella, JamKazam’s mission in life is to enable musicians at different locations across the Internet to play music together in real time.  Thanks to this platform, I can be teleported from DC to Tennessee to play piano trios Monday morning, and easily be back in time to virtually visit Colorado for Bach arias with a singer and violinist Monday evening.

I’ve greatly enjoyed meeting new people and reading great music with them, but what I love most of all as a chamber musician is plumbing the depths of a piece through regular rehearsal and coaching.  When my regular JamKazam quartet first formed, I wasn’t sure whether this level of seriousness would truly be possible.  Would we actually be able to rehearse?  We were pleasantly surprised to find that, although there was some initial awkwardness about starting and stopping (to conserve bandwidth we work using audio only), and there were many jokes about mind-reading (we sometimes call ourselves the Carnac Quartet), as experienced chamber players, it was really not that hard to adapt our ears and rehearsal techniques to this medium.  Eventually we felt good enough about our process to work towards eventual performance.  We lured a coach to join us– his first time on JamKazam– and had an excellent session.  It was edifying for us, and a game-changer for him: “I never would have thought I would get to coach a live chamber ensemble from my living room, or even just be able to listen to live music-making from there either.  I didn’t realize how much I missed live music making until afterwards, and this opportunity has left me wanting more. “

JamKazam was originally designed with rock bands in mind, and today there are just a few of us classical musicians out there. Our numbers are growing with each skeptic turned evangelist though, and I can envision the day when there is a vibrant on-line chamber music community– reading, rehearsing, refining, and performing together.  

In service of that future I’ve enlisted the help of DC Chamber Musicians, a Washington-area chamber music organization, to allow me to spread word about JamKazam more widely and to create some needed infrastructure. While JamKazam has many virtues, documentation has not been one of them, and the tool’s ability to search for compatible musicians is very rudimentary. 

For a number of years, DC Chamber Musicians hosted a Directory of JamKazam Musicians. However, the new ACMP website’s Directory of Chamber Musicians has taken on this function.

To find players on JamKazam: Search the ACMP Directory of Chamber Musicians. Open “Advanced Search,” and then open the dropdown menu for “Online Playing Services.” Then select JamKazam.

I have also posted this Guide to JamKazam. It includes step-by-step instructions for JamKazam set-up, complete with screen shots for each step of the process. Click the highlighted blue “Next” button at the bottom of each page to be directed through the process:

Achieve good audio quality

Play in a session

Find people to play with 

Additional resources

For starters, you can get JamKazam up and running with some wired headphones (you can start with a simple pair of earbuds if that is all you have) and the built-in microphone on your computer.  To reduce latency (the lag between when sound is created and when you hear it) enough to actually play with other people, you’ll need to access the Internet directly, by connecting your computer to your router with an  Ethernet cable.  If your router is far from where you like to play, Ethernet cables are inexpensive, and available in many lengths.  The FAQ – Basic gear section of the help guide has lots more information about this. 

Your experience will be better if you invest a small amount in a good microphone and an audio interface. To help defray some of this expense ACMP has cleverly negotiated a custom discount with Sweetwater!  Log into the ACMP website and visit the members-only “Member Benefits and Discounts” page for information on how to take advantage of this deal.

Here is a comprehensive list of what you will need to optimize your experience on JamKazam:

  • A computer running Windows 7 or higher or Mac OS X 10.7 or higher, 64-bit (if you have a computer more recent than 2011 or so, you’re probably fine)
  • Broadband Internet
  • A wired (Ethernet) connection to your router – if you need one, you can buy a long cable like this on Amazon. You may need an adapter, too, if your computer has no Ethernet port.
  • Wired headphones – if your cord is too short, you can buy an extension cable like this.
  • A microphone, ideally plugged into an external USB audio interface (not a complete list), and thence into your computer (but the built-in sound card could maybe work if there’s not too much latency– depends on how fast the computer does the audio processing).
  • A JamKazam account — sign up at https://www.jamkazam.com/signup
  • The JamKazam software, which you can download from https://www.jamkazam.com/downloads
  • The JamKazam server needs to be up in order to establish a session for you.

I am one of a growing group of ACMP members in the new “Technology Task Force.” My contact info and that of a number of other ACMP members prepared to offer technical support for virtual chamber music is available on the new Technology Task Force page on the ACMP website.

I hope you’ll join our growing community.  Go here to learn more about how you can use this technology to fill the big, depressing hole in your life.

Tags: 

Online chamber music

Remote chamber music

JamKazam

COVID Safe Chamber Music

Music Technology

More Articles

Chamber repertoire for oboe: a curated list

Oboist and scholar Dr. Kelsey Maes has shared her 60-page list of chamber music with oboe with ACMP. The list is organized by country, style and time period and is easy to navigate with hyperlinks in a detailed table of contents. Explore the list and discover new pieces to play with oboe!

Read More ↗

Chamber music for bassoon: The George Zukerman Library

Throughout his long life, Canadian bassoon legend George Zukerman collected a huge library representing three centuries of bassoon repertoire.  Concerti, chamber music, solo pieces – much of it hitherto unknown to the bassoon community. In tribute to this beloved Canadian musician, the Council of Canadian Bassoonists has digitized his collection and assembled this extensive online database.

Read More ↗

On coaching mixed chamber music with winds

Professional flutist Jayn Rosenfeld reflects on her experiences coaching mixed chamber music for winds with strings, piano and other instruments, and shares a list of her personal favorite pieces.

Read More ↗

For this oboist, it’s not a job but a journey

After a long career as an association manager, Sally Finney Timm has more time to play oboe and helps others find an outlet by chairing the International Double Reed Society's Avocational Players Committee. Read Sally's story about how she fell in love with the oboe and kept it going over so many years.

Read More ↗

Wind players shine in the Broadway Bach Ensemble’s chamber concert

Every Spring the Broadway Bach Ensemble presents a chamber music concert featuring the orchestra's members and their friends in a wide range of small ensembles. Winds will come to the fore at this year's concert, at 7:30 on Thursday March 19 at Broadway Presbyterian Church in Manhattan's Upper West Side.

Read More ↗

Meet the Musician: Flutist Svjetlana Kabalin (Sunday, March 29, 2pm ET)

Join ACMP for an interview and Q&A with Svjetlana Kabalin on founding and sustaining Sylvan Winds and expanding wind quintet repertoire.

Read More ↗

March Winds: Wind Chamber Music Appreciation Month

This March, ACMP is proud to launch "March Winds": Wind Chamber Music Appreciation Month! It's an international grassroots movement to expand the awareness and appreciation of the rich repertoire of chamber music including winds.

Read More ↗

Kerry Graham: It’s never too late to learn the Baroque bassoon

At age 50, Kerry Graham was living what many would consider a rich and full life, working internationally as a chemical engineer and doing pretty well.  But music, and especially the bassoon, kept tugging at her sleeve. She wanted to go back to school to learn the bassoon. Read Kerry's interview with ACMP Board chair Bob Goetz.

Read More ↗

Helen Rice and me!

Professional flutist Jayn Rosenfeld grew up in a family of passionate amateur musicians and had a close personal connection with ACMP's founder Helen Rice. Read Jayn's story about her childhood experiences with some of the early pioneers of ACMP.

Read More ↗

The 2026 ACMP Haydn Challenge

March 31 is Joseph Haydn’s birthday! It’s also a fabulous occasion to celebrate his contributions to the world of chamber music with a gift in his honor to ACMP…Throughout the month of March, we hope you will participate in the ACMP Haydn Challenge.

Read More ↗

Irreverent Friends, the True Inspiration Behind Clarinet’s Chamber Music Gems

The Clarinet. When one thinks of the instrument, we are instantly taken on a rich journey of musical landmarks: New Orleans, Rhapsody in Blue, Mozart, Benny Goodman, top orchestras, your cousin’s wedding reception. Chamber music might not be at the top of the list, but indeed, clarinetists have inspired some of the finest pieces in history for the genre.

Read More ↗

Sound and Sustenance: A Report from the Del Sol Adult Chamberfest

On a sunny weekend last month in San Francisco, 30 amateur chamber musicians from around the country gathered in the home of two members of the Del Sol String Quartet for the annual DEl Sol Adult Chamberfest. Neighbors would have heard strains of Britten, Janáček, Shaw, Golijov, Bunch, Beethoven and Brahms, along with laughter and good times!

Read More ↗

New ACMP video: “Everything you always wanted to know about bows but were afraid to ask” with Gabriel Schaff

ACMP just released the video from Gabriel Schaff's recent online talk, "Everything you always wanted to know about bows but were afraid to ask." After an illuminating presentation on the evolution of the modern bow, the questions kept pouring in. There's so much to learn and discover from Gabriel and your colleagues in ACMP.

Read More ↗

Mozart in a Brewery! Our First Young ACMP Event

Have you ever played Mozart in the middle of a brewery just for fun? That’s exactly what happened in early January when local Young ACMP members met up at Grimm Ales in Brooklyn. We co-hosted the event with ACMP member Ben Bregman, who brought music, friends new to ACMP, and a few of his young students and their parents.

Read More ↗

ACMP presents the 2025 Susan McIntosh Lloyd Award to the SoCal Chamber Music Workshop in memory of Ron Goldman

This past Fall ACMP gave its 2025 Susan McIntosh Lloyd Award for Excellence and Diversity in Chamber Music to the SoCal Chamber Music Workshop in honor and in memory of SoCal's founder and long-time ACMP board member Ron Goldman. Watch my interview with Julie Park and read Adam Birnbaum's touching tribute to Ron.

Read More ↗

Turning ink blots into music – a discussion on the meaning and madness of notation

Join Cal Wiersma and a live string quartet for an illuminating class about decoding musical notation and translating it back into a musical line, live in Brooklyn and live-streamed on YouTube.

Read More ↗

A New 5-Day Summer Home for Adult Chamber Musicians in Brevard

Brevard Music Center is launching the inaugural Adult Chamber Music Workshop, June 3-8, 2026, and we could not be more excited to welcome adult amateur musicians to our beautiful mountain campus in Western North Carolina. The program features focused rehearsal time, inspiring coaching, great colleagues at your stand, and the simple joy of spending time immersed in chamber music.

Read More ↗

Charles Hsu – oncologist, violist, luthier

Charles Hsu has packed a lot into his 33 years. Born in the New Jersey, he grew up in Taiwan, moved back to the United States to attend MIT, and, after a stint as a management consultant, pursued his medical studies at Yale and Harvard. Today, he is Dr. Hsu, a junior attending medical oncologist at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center in New York. But through all of these pursuits, there is his love of chamber music.

Read More ↗

The Oregon-Washington ACMP Play-In

On January 17, 2026, 45 chamber musicians, ages 23-80, met at Portland State University's Music School Hall in Portland, Oregon for a Play-In organized by NAOC councilor Virginia Feldman.

Read More ↗

For the Love of It: A Legacy

What to do with all that music, when you finally, reluctantly, stop playing? At 99, Phyllis Booth decided to gift her collection to Golden Chamber Music at Sleepy Hollow, where she and her late husband Wayne Booth had a long, joyful connection since shortly after its founding in 1969.

Read More ↗

Load More

 

All Articles By