In March 1996, Nora Farrell and William Duckworth began to develop Cathedral, one of the first interactive works of music and art on the World Wide Web.
Also in the preliminary stages of the system, they determined that they wanted to make a place on the Web for acoustic music through a series of live webcasts and performances online.
[3][4] The advantages of joining an online band include the ability to collaborate with musicians, vocalists, audio engineers, etc.
This platform provides an alternative to the traditional 1:1 music lesson, but its effectiveness on a higher scale is questionable.
Research conducted in 2007 at Boston University led by musicologist and comparative educationist David G. Hebert provided five key challenges for online music education programs: To address these challenges, Hebert pointed out the importance of expert mentors, outstanding research theses completed online, a strong record of graduate job placement from online programs, detailed planning between instructors and music departments, and the implementation of assessment moderation systems.
Each musician usually needs to record to a click track or metronome and upload the instrument or vocals for the song independently.
Even more decentralized collaboration happens between YouTube users; one Cracked columnist praised the cover of the Game of Thrones theme performed by violinist Jason Yang and guitarist and sound engineer Roger Lima and directed by Paolo Dy.And these people have never met.