A practice loop is a short excerpt that repeats while you focus on a specific problem: a breath between lyric lines, a chord change, a drum fill, a difficult interval or a transcription detail. CleanStems Audio Looper works in the browser, so your selected audio is not uploaded by the looping tool.

Use permitted audio: practise with recordings you created, own, licensed or are otherwise allowed to use.

Choose a Loop That Is Small but Complete

Start with one or two musical phrases, often 5 to 20 seconds. Include a little sound before the difficult entrance so you can hear the lead-in. A loop that starts exactly on a note can make timing harder because there is no preparation beat.

Set Start and End Points

Open Audio Looper, select a file and enter a start and end time. Begin with a wider range, listen once and tighten the boundary until the transition feels musical. Avoid a loop that cuts off consonants, cymbal tails or the beat that resolves the phrase.

Practise in Three Passes

  1. Listen without playing or singing and mark the rhythm and entry.
  2. Perform at a comfortable level for several clean repeats rather than racing through mistakes.
  3. Play the section once without the loop and check whether the correction transfers into context.

Combine Looping with Speed and Tempo

When accuracy breaks down at full speed, use Speed and Pitch Changer to slow playback while preserving pitch where supported by the browser. For timing work, practise separately against the Metronome, then return to the audio loop.

When to Export a Clip

If you want a short rehearsal file for a lesson or offline practice, use Audio Cutter to export a WAV excerpt. Looping itself is intended for playback in the browser and does not create a new file.