tubeloops is a practice tool for instrumentalists. Find a song on YouTube, loop the hard part, slow it down, and drill it until it’s yours — then save and share your loop-sets with a community of players working on the same material.
Why it exists
Playing along with a recording is one of the best ways to learn an instrument — but generic players make it clumsy: you fumble to find the right four bars, fight to set a clean loop, and lose your place every time you adjust the speed. tubeloops is built for that one job: precise A/B loops, frame-accurate handles, fine and coarse speed control, and a way to chop a long solo into bite-sized phrases you can work through one at a time.
The other half is sharing. A good set of practice loops for a song is worth keeping — and worth handing to the next player learning it. tubeloops lets you curate loop-sets and publish them to communities so the work compounds.
Who’s behind it
[Draft — replace with your story: who you are, what you play, and why you built this.]A note on YouTube
tubeloops plays videos through YouTube’s official embedded player and links back to the source. It is not affiliated with, endorsed by, or sponsored by YouTube or Google.