For years, musicians wanted to use their guitar to trigger synthesizers, but traditional guitar-to-MIDI systems (Roland, Axon, etc.) required a special divided pickup—one tiny pickup per string. These were expensive, finicky about setup, prone to latency, and often failed on fast playing or bends.

Jam Origin proved that a clever algorithm + modern CPU power can replace decades of expensive, clunky hardware. It’s a classic “why didn’t anyone else think of that?” story—except they did, and they pulled it off.

MIDI Guitar 3 remains the gold standard for software-based guitar-to-MIDI. It’s not perfect—fast, dense chords can still glitch, and acoustic guitars with high string crosstalk can confuse it—but for electric guitar into a clean interface, it’s a game-changer. The company continues to refine the algorithm, and it’s widely used by producers, live loopers, and experimental guitarists.

Here’s the condensed interesting story:

The story of the is indeed fascinating because it flips a long-standing technical problem on its head: instead of requiring specialized hardware (like a hexaphonic pickup), it uses clever software to translate standard guitar audio into MIDI in real time.