How to Use a Guitar Looper: Desktop Looping for Practice and Songwriting
Master the guitar looper for practice and songwriting. Covers recording your first loop, overdubbing layers, tempo sync, undo/redo, and why a looper is the single best practice tool.
A looper records what you play and plays it back in a loop. You play over it. It's the closest thing to playing with another musician when you're alone.
Your first loop
- Click Record
- Play a simple chord progression (4-8 bars)
- Click Stop
- The loop plays back immediately
- Play a solo over it
Overdubbing
Click Overdub to layer additional parts:
- Layer 1: Chord progression
- Layer 2: Bass line
- Layer 3: Lead melody
- Layer 4: Percussion (tap on your guitar body)
Each layer is independent. Undo removes the last layer without affecting earlier ones.
Tempo sync
The looper should sync to a global tempo. If your effects chain includes tempo-synced delay, the delay time matches the loop length automatically.
Why looper placement matters
The looper must be last in the signal chain — after all effects. If it's earlier and you change effects, the loop changes too.