

Jason: Music rights are a tough business and its players have deep roots. What happened to turntable.fm, and why is there still a space for JQBX to thrive? This works the same if you are in an office with multiple people and tired of having to use headphones to listen to tunes. For example, taking a car ride with a few folks? No need to pass the aux, use JQBX. I used to be a big fan of turntable.fm before it shut down because it helped me discover new music as well as provide a high quality stream of songs without any intervention needed on my end.Īnd, it makes more sense to use JQBX when you're with or near your friends. I listen to music to keep focused, but when you have to constantly pick it or make a new playlist it becomes a distraction.

Jason: I built JQBX because it was proving near impossible to pick 8 hours of quality music during my typical work day. I talked with Zigelbaum about JQBX and how that steady feed of music can be the key to productivity for a lot of us. Just like with turntable.fm, you can step up to DJ in order to share tracks with friends, join different rooms, vote on tracks, or simply listen to a dynamic stream of music all day. JQBX (pronounced “jukebox”) is a social music app for Web, Mac, and iOS. That's why NYC entrepreneur Jason Zigelbaum built JQBX. We might get by with Pandora's free, personalized radio and we might try to follow each other's Spotify finds, but we really miss turntable.fm. The truth is that we audiophiles still trust our peers over a fancy algorithm. You'd think that with the variety of options available for streaming music today, music discovery would be better than ever.
