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Line 6 JM4Line 6 JM4 Looper Guitar Effects Pedal Silver 99-060-1305
Get your jam on with the JM4 Looper from Line 6. This pedal can combine jam track with sound-on-sound looping while using Line 6's revolutionary tones. This looper includes 100 Endless Jam tracks in more than ten styles as played by top LA and Nashville session players not machines. Use these tracks for developing chops and sparking your creativity. The looper can record up to 24 minutes and with storage for up to 100 recorder jams. Transfer your jams via SD card with the rear mounted SD slo... Read more

Details
Brand: LINE 6
Part Numbers: 99-060-1305, 990601305
UPC: 0614252005012, 614252005012
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Line 6 JM4

 

 

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Comments to date: 3. Page 1 of 1. Average Rating:
fuzz 5:37am on Monday, November 1st, 2010 
"However, you can get around that whole pedal issue easily, record out through another device! For those new with this kind of technology.
MichaelGrimm 3:59am on Friday, September 24th, 2010 
Great product, but some software issues. I recieved the product this afternoon, and expected a simple plug in, and install of the software.
magnetmaz 10:35pm on Wednesday, May 12th, 2010 
Excellent!!! This is an EXCELLENT wireless system. What really made the system give me the "wow" factor, was the battery reading. Line 6 XDR95 Nice unit but try to get the battery out in a hurry very poor. Modified with External Antenna I have bought this device a year ago and I was very satisfied about the sound.

Comments posted on www.ps2netdrivers.net are solely the views and opinions of the people posting them and do not necessarily reflect the views or opinions of us.

 

Documents

doc0

Line 6 JM4 Looper

Digital looping pedal

Bob Thomas
he extended repetition of rhythmic or melodic phrases lies at the very heart of music and probably has been there ever since our ancestors first discovered the pleasures of singing and dancing. Musical structures that combine repeating melodic and rhythmic elements became popular across all cultures not only because they are easy to memorise, but also because of their potential, under the right circumstances, to induce meditative and other transcendental states of mind. These repetitive, rhythmic structures developed into a sophisticated high art in many cultures, but European art music, some time in the Middle Ages, started to take a different path. The development and elaboration of the rules of harmony that began during the Renaissance led finally to the great Classical works, where complex harmonic structures used rhythm and repetition simply as a landscape for the harmony to occupy. This resulted in the mode-based, repetitive, rhythmic, non-classical music of Europe and the rest of the world being labelled as primitive.
May 2009 | performing-musician.com
Ever since the dawn of tape loops, musicians have exploited the ability to record a phrase and play it back again. and again. and again.
Ravels 1928 composition Bolro is, to me, the point at which rhythm and repetition returned to centre stage, its two themes repeating nine times in 15 minutes as it builds to that climactic crescendo. In the early 1940s, composers such as Cage began using gramophone records with varispeed turntables to produce works based on pre-recorded music, and after the end of the Second World War, musique concrte composers like Messiaen and Stockhausen produced some works based on gramophone records. However, the availability of the tape recorder from 1950 meant that the earlier technology was quickly superseded. Edgard Varses 1954 composition, Deserts, was the first of this new wave of music to use both the physical and electronic manipulation of tape to alter, reverse, edit, overlay and generally mangle pre-existing or newly recorded sounds in exciting new ways. At the same time, on the other side of the Atlantic, a certain Lester Polsfuss (Les Paul) was also using the new tape technology to create new music but, although in many ways it was no less complex than that of Cage, Varse et al, his work was aimed at capturing and enhancing a performance of a popular song, rather than trying to create new works by reworking recordings. No one actually knows when tape loops (from which our term looping takes its name) were developed but it is likely that their genesis goes back to the inventors or the early users of the tape recorder. In any event, outside the world of avant-garde music, tape loops almost immediately turned up in radio and film studios the world over. However, tape loops are static in that once created, they cant be modified live. It wasnt until 1963 when the American composer Terry Riley was working in Paris on the recording of his music for the play, The Gift, that an anonymous engineer developed for him a tape delay/feedback system based on two Revox tape recorders that could be used live. This system, which Riley named the Time Lag Accumulator, and which became Robert Fripps 1970s Frippertronics, is the spiritual ancestor of
Line 6 JM4 Looper 03.09 layout.indd 66

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the digital looping systems that we know today. For more mortal musicians in the 1960s and 1970s, the tape-based Watkins Copicat and the more costly Echoplex gave us a foretaste of what was to come from the digital world, but it wasnt until 1986 that the legendary TC Electronics 2290 the first digital device that was a real looper ushered in the era of live looping as we know it today. New, the TC 2290 was horrendously expensive, but things have improved dramatically in recent years as more cost-effective solutions have arrived, and nowadays one of the best-known and most effective examples of a musician employing live looping is KT Tunstalls brilliant use of her Akai Headrush E2 delay/phrase sampler pedal on Black Horse And The Cherry Tree. The new JM4 Looper isnt Line 6s first looper, as the DL4 Delay Modeler, released in 2000, had a 14-second loop facility, and the loop and playback engine first used in the Spider Jam combo provides the basic architecture of the JM4. Line 6, as we all know, are a company whose innovative, modelling-based products have been taking the world by storm since they started up in the mid 1990s with the aim of harnessing technology for the benefit of guitarists. With the JM4, Line 6 have taken the engine first developed for the Spider Jam combo, and have added a number of looping-related features and facilities that I havent seen before.

How to drive it

The JM4 is housed in a cast, greyish-brown metal case crowned by a fair number of heavily chromed knobs and switches. If youve played with the Spider Jam, youll find the controls of the JM4 instantly familiar. The front panel splits conceptually into three areas: the loop/playback controls, the knobs relating to the amp models and the four footswitches that handle, in addition to several other functions, Record, Playback and Undo. Inputs and outputs sit on the back panel. Starting from the left, youll find the Input jack for your guitar, which has its own dedicated amp modelling and effects processing. The XLR socket and its associated Trim control for a (non-phantom powered) microphone or
other balanced source comes next, and it feeds independent EQ and effects processing. Next youll find the mono Aux input, which can be used for almost any kind of input (second guitar, bass, keyboard, drum machine, etc), and this can be processed and recorded using either the guitars or mics effects. The last input is a stereo mini-jack which lets you feed any stereo source into the JM4 for recording as part of a loop or for playing along to. The main JM4 outputs are made up of a mono jack Out To Amp socket and a pair of mono jacks giving you a Stereo Line Out for connection to a PA system or recorder. In what Line 6 call Normal operation, guitar and any loop playbacks etc are fed to all jacks, but in Performance mode, only the guitar is present at the Amp output, with everything else turning up on the stereo jacks. The last output is a stereo mini-jack headphone output, which, when used, forces the JM4 to return to Normal operation. The units overall output level is controlled by the rear panel Master Volume. The back-panel complement is completed by the SD card slot, which takes standard SD cards up to a maximum capacity of 2GB. You can use the card to store JM4 Looper recordings and to transfer them to and from your computer. This ability to create, record and then export loops, modify them externally and then re-import them is a significant step forward for looping. On the front panel, the middle row of controls for the 12 amp models are pretty much self-explanatory, with the selector, drive and EQ controls operating as expected. The effects are limited to one knob selection and level control of Chorus/Flange, Phaser and Tremolo, a second operating similarly for Delay, Tape Echo and Sweep Delay, and a third dedicated to Reverb. Delay times are set using the Tap button that youll find on the top right of the front panel, where it also selects the Tuner function when held. Finally, the Channel Volume allows you to balance the volumes of different setups when you store them in the 36 User preset locations. In case you think that that isnt that much storage, you might like to know that the JM4 comes factory-loaded with a comprehensive collection of guitar amp/effects combinations made up of over 200 artist-created presets and over 150

song-based presets for your sonic enjoyment. Its the 71 songs and 86 drum patterns that are factory loaded into the JM4 Looper that really make it a loopers paradise. Recorded by real, live session players and seamlessly and endlessly looped (you can turn this off), these form a great basis for jamming along to, or as the basis for your own songs and loops. When you load a song or drum pattern, the JM4 automatically loads a suitable guitar amp/effects preset (this too can be disabled) and youre good to go. The top set of front-panel controls looks after the selection and setup of loop playback and recording. The back-lit, orange, mid-row matrix display keeps you informed of what youre up to and, on its right, the large Select knob and the four-way navigation button let you find your way through the menus and modify values. The Save button that sits next to these lets you store amp/effects setups, save recordings and erase saved recordings. The four buttons on the left of the display are seriously multi-functional. The Record Select button toggles between Guitar and Mic/Aux inputs, but hold it and it lets you choose whether the Aux input reaches the recorder via the guitar amp/effects or through the Mic effects. The Song/Drums button lets you select playback from a factory song or drum pattern, or from a user recording/loop stored on an SD card or the JM4 itself. A second press brings in, among others, the Time Stretch/Transpose and Speed/Pitch Adjust functions. The Level/Inputs switch brings up playback levels for Song/Drums, Guitar and Mic/Aux tracks, while a second press lets you set Mic, Aux and CD input levels. The Tones/Settings control has the most options of all, giving you on first press direct access to the Style, Artist and User guitar presets, then the Mic/Aux presets on the second press and finally another nine functions including Mic/Aux EQ, Delay/Reverb and Compressor, plus six setup settings. Finally, as this is a floor-based unit designed for live use, four footswitches let you actually drive the thing. There are five footswitch modes: Jam Control, Loop FX, Rec Select, Guitar Preset and Guitar Amp/FX. In all modes the extreme right-hand footswitch is used solely for mode selection/exit, with the other three controlling

Multiple input sources are catered for, along with flexible output routing options.
performing-musician.com | May 2009
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mode functions. Jam Control is the default and lets you play songs/drum patterns, record, play and overdub loops and undo errors and clear unwanted loops. Loop FX mode simply lets you play back the selected loop at half speed. Rec Select enables you to step through your previous recordings to select one for playing along to, and to toggle Guitar or Mic/Aux input for recording. Guiatr Preset steps through Presets and gives you footswitch access to Tap time and Tuner activation. Finally the Guitar Amp/FX mode lets you individually bypass the selected presets amp model, modulation effects and delay effects.

In use

The JM4 is, in reality, ridiculously easy to use. Plug in your guitar and an amp or headphones, select a song to jam along to, adjust the levels so that you can hear what you want to hear and jam away to your hearts content. Fancy creating a loop? If you want drums on it (you can record a loop without one), just pick a drum pattern to play along to, select Guitar as your recording source, hit the Record footswitch, listen to the count-in (only there if youre using drums), play as long as you want your loop to be, hit the footswitch on the first beat of the next bar and thats you done. If you dont like the result, hit Undo and start over, otherwise you can overdub another guitar or use the Mic/Aux inputs to add different sounds. It really is that easy to get started! If you want to get a bit more into the JM4, you can change the key and tempo of the pre-recorded songs to better suit your voice or

Tech Spec

JM4 Looper
200+ artist-created presets. 150+ song-based presets. 36 user-programmable presets. 12 Line 6 amp models. Seven Smart Control effects. Three Tone controls. Integrated tuner. Independent Mic/Aux input effects:
three-band EQ, Compressor, Delay and Reverb 100+ Endless Jam tracks and drum grooves. 24 minutes of 16-bit/44.1kHz internal recording time. SD card slot for importing and exporting loops and recordings (maximum 2GB). Record/Overdub, Play/Stop, Half Speed and Undo footswitches. Quarter-inch instrument input. Quarter-inch aux input. XLR mic input with Trim control. 3.5mm CD/MP3 input. 3.5mm stereo headphone output. Quarter-inch guitar amp output. Quarter-inch stereo outputs. Dimensions (WDH): 305 x 190 x 83mm. Weight: 1.8kg.

playing skills. Each song displays its basic key signature on its title page and changing pitch and/or tempo is the work of moments. The onboard memory is sufficient for a maximum of 100 individual recordings totalling 24 minutes, so once youve recorded your loop you can then save it, which will also store the pitch/tempo setting, the Aux setup, mic effectss and the guitar preset used. Again, all these functions are really simple to get to and to use. The quality of sound that you get from the JM4 is very good and I would have absolutely no hesitation in using one on stage or as part of a studio session. I particularly liked the separate guitar output for direct routing to an amplifier such a useful facility. If all that the JM4 gave me was a bunch of jam tracks to play along with and the ability to build up, record, save and recall an infinite number of loops (SD card purchase budget permitting), I would consider it to be the biggest bargain in the looping world. However, the JM4 has a trick up its capacious sleeve that, for me, is its real raison dtre. Recordings saved on the JM4 are saved in a proprietary format named JAM. Essentially, a JAM file is a folder that contains a Guitar track, a WAV/Mic/Aux track and a track that contains all the settings for the recording. In addition, the JM4 can create (through its Save Rec Mix As WAV function) mono 16-bit WAV files on, and load them back from, an SD card. It is these two latter abilties that make the whole thing so exciting. Saving a Rec Mix as a WAV lets you adjust the relative levels of the three replay tracks (Song/ Drums, Guitar and Mic/Aux/WAV), which means that you can create three solo and completely synchronised WAV loops by turning down two of the three tracks each time you save the recording as a WAV to the SD card. If you then reload a WAV, you can overdub another guitar track, mix that down solo and youve got yet another perfectly synchronised loop at your disposal. Workflow is crucial in making all this synchronised loop creation work and the JM4 Advanced Manual (available only on-line) gives you the blow-by-blow lowdown on how to achieve this.

Once youve got your synchronised loops, you can then import them into your computer and overdub, add new material and generally be creative knowing that you can then re-save them as WAV files and load them back into your JM4 where they will loop and (as long as you havent changed the length) lock perfectly with the original reference loop. Now thats what I call a killer app, and probably one that Varese and Cage would have killed for!

Conclusion

Ive been playing around with tape loops and loop-based music for longer than I care to remember. Having started out with physical tape loops, in recent times my looping has been primarily computer-based and, frankly, not that high up my list of musical priorities. The Line 6 JM4 is set to change that. I havent really found anything about it that I dont like. I could have a whinge about the fact that, once youve selected a song from the library list, the display doesnt automatically revert to the main Song screen so that, without having to bend down and manually press the Song switch, you can immediately see what key it is in. Continuing in minor moan mode, I could also question why Line 6 dont include the songs chord sequences in the manual; why the numbering of the JM4s song and drum library lists are so wildly non-sequential; and why the Advanced Manual is only available on-line. However, none of these are actually of any importance. The real-world reality is that the JM4 sounds great, is easy to use live or in the studio, allows you to export and import WAV files to and from SD cards, and the potential of 6.5 hours recording time on a 2Gb card means that you can build up an enormous library of loops and recordings that can be cycled and recycled virtually forever. If youre into looping and youve heard of it, youve probably already been out and bought a Line 6 JM4 Looper. If you arent or you havent, just go out and buy one. Given its feature set, facilities and retail price point, theres really nothing more to say.
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Performing

LIVE SOUND WORLD

This article was originally published in Performing Musician magazine, May 2009 edition.
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All contents copyright SOS Publications Group and/or its licensors, 1985-2009. All rights reserved. The contents of this article are subject to worldwide copyright protection and reproduction in whole or part, whether mechanical or electronic, is expressly forbidden without the prior written consent of the Publishers. Great care has been taken to ensure accuracy in the preparation of this article but neither Sound On Sound Limited nor the publishers can be held responsible for its contents. The views expressed are those of the contributors and not necessarily those of the publishers.

doc1

Line 6 JM4 Looper

knobs and footswitches it's well laid out and easy enough to use
(although you will need to study
the manual). The top portion handles 'housekeeping' tasks like input selection, drum and song selections and the many settings/ level controls. A typically clever feature is the ability to set output levels of the song/drum track, guitar track and mic/aux track as well as setting the relative level of the overdubbed guitarimportant if you're using the JM4 for sound-on-sound loop creation. You can save up to 100 'CDquality' recorded jams (a tota124
Hot on the heels of Line 6's all-singing, all-dancing Spider Jam combo comes this new footpedallooper that could be the essential purchase of 2008 by Dave Burrluck
over the past few years, with all the big FX companies - Roland/ BOSS, DigiTech, Line 6 etc-
nee the habitat ofleft-field noodlers, the looper pedal has gone very mainstream
producing ever more capable
units. The concept is simple enough: the looper enables you to
capture a chord progression or riff and loop it endlessly while you overdub on top.
Obviously the JM4 does this, but it also does a lot more besides. For starters we get 100 plus songs
and drum tracks (proper recordings by some very capable musicians as featured on the
Spider Jam). Select which of these
you can save your masterpiece to either the internal memory or SD card, allowing you to export the recording into your computer either for storage or as the basis for a new song idea. About 25 per cent larger than Line 6's stompbox modelling FX, the JM 4 feels rugged and looks good with all the connects placed on the top side. While early loopers just dealt with the manipulation of the input source, the JM4 comes loaded with 12 Line 6 amp models from clean to 'insane', seven 'smart control' effects and reverb. While the amp models have extensive controls,
You also get effects for the mic/ aux input, independent of those used for your guitar.
Although the JM4 has extensive
the FX are limited to depth/speed
level, while the delays and echoes add tap tempo (not via a footswitch but by a push button that also engages the tuner, which is displayed in the small, but acceptably bright, LCD window).
you want, select your tempo/key
(you have a choice or timesrretch/ pitchshift or varispeed) and add your own guitar parts, vocals, orvia the aux input - any other electrified instrument. Once done
November 2008 Guitarist 129
LINE 6 JM4l00PER 257 EFFECTS

The Rivals

The KT Tunstall fave Akai Headrush E2 (95) has 24
seconds loop time plus echo! delay. The immensely powerful

~IUf~'j.~

three stereo track BOSS RC-50
hoop Station (369) with max 49 minutes of record time plus USB output and rhythm guide
with over 50 pattern's. BOSS's
RC-2 Loop Station (149) is a powerful stomp box-sized looper with 16 minutes of loop time and
11 presets plus enboard drum
patterns. DfgfIech's Hardwire
DL-8 Delay/Looper (129) rightly received a Guitarist Gold
for its mix of great delays plus
easy-to-use 20 seconds of

stereo looping fun.

minutes of recording time, says Line 6) to the internal memory. Or with a 2GB max SD card, you can apparently save 6.5 hours of
recorded jams. Initiallyyou can get to grips with the JM4 simply with
headphones then think about any amplification. You can, for example, run everything into a PA or the song/drum tracks into a PA (or hi-fi) and the guitar tones directly to your amp. It's very flexible-and with a clean acoustic amp, for example, we certainly got great results: the drum/song tracks are really punchy, the guitar tones varied and characterful. Many of the artist presets are great places to start and are more than adequate for serious practice and there are numerous tones here that are of easily of recordable quality,
With just a set of headphones, a guitar, a lead and the JM4 you have the ultimate practice/loop station
especially with the frankly excellent onboard effects.

Line 6 JM4Loopel'

PRICE:257 (Inc power supply) ORIGIN: China TYPE: Digital phrase sampling 'loop station' with pre-recorded song/drum tracks and extensive onboard modelling amp/FX tones FEATURES: 24 minutes of recording time tothe internal memory: 6.5 hours with max 2GB SOCard (not supplied). 100+ EndlessJam tracks and drum grooves CONTROLS: Record select, drums/ song, inputs/level. settings/tone. save. and tap tempo/tuner push buttons. Select knob and four-way navigation button. Amp model select drive, bass. mid treble, modulation FX.delay FX reverb.channel volume rotary controls FOOTSWITCHES: Record/overdub. play/stop. undo. mode (accessesfour different functions for the switches) PATCHES: 200+ artist-created presets. 150+ song-based presets,36 userprogrammable presets

The ~ottomLine

We like: Easy looping; song/ drum tracks: onboa-d guitar amp and FX tones: artist presets: extensive hook-up facilities; ease-of-use: price We dislike: Honestly nothing! Guitarist says: If you want a standalone practice station with authentic song and drum tracks. realistic modelled guitar sounds and excellent quality FX. I00k no further. Hours offun and improved playing awaits

Vel'dict

With just a set ofheadphones, a guitar, a lead and the JM4 you have the ultimate practicejloop station: take it anywhere, study, create. The quality backing/drum tracks, the excellent onboard guitar sounds and sensible outing routing means that cranked up through aPA and/or your guitar amp you can easily perform with it. Practice just got a whole lot more fun - and this could well be the best 257 you ever spend. t!I

MIDI: No

CONNECTIONS: 6.4mm jack instrument input aux input. mono guitar output and stereo outputs: 3,2mm CO/ mp3 input and stereo headphone output and XLRmic input with dedicated trim control. Mastervolume output control POWER:DC9V power supply (included) EXT CONTROLLERS:No line 302700.--;;-:~-cwww.line6.com

Test results

Build quality Features Sound Value for money GUITARIST RATING
***** ***** ***** ***** *****
130 Guitarist November 2008

 

Technical specifications

Full description

Get your jam on with the JM4 Looper from Line 6. This pedal can combine jam track with sound-on-sound looping while using Line 6's revolutionary tones. This looper includes 100 Endless Jam tracks in more than ten styles as played by top LA and Nashville session players not machines. Use these tracks for developing chops and sparking your creativity. The looper can record up to 24 minutes and with storage for up to 100 recorder jams. Transfer your jams via SD card with the rear mounted SD slot. Easy to use controls include Record/Overdub/Play/Stop Half Speed and Undo for easy songwriting practice etc. The XLR input allows for vocal loops as well.

 

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