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Tech

JBL’s new BandBox amps use AI to mute tracks so you can play along

AI stem separation is coming out of the studio and into practice amps.

By
Shubham Sawarkar
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ByShubham Sawarkar
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I’m a tech enthusiast who loves exploring gadgets, trends, and innovations. With certifications in CISCO Routing & Switching and Windows Server Administration, I bring a sharp...
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Jan 22, 2026, 5:27 PM EST
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JBL BandBox Solo Trio amp
Image: JBL
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If you’ve ever tried to practice along with your favorite song and thought, “I wish I could just mute that guitar part and drop myself into the mix,” JBL’s new BandBox amps are basically that fantasy in a battery-powered box. They’re practice amps first, but the real hook is the onboard “Stem AI” engine that tries to separate and remove vocals or individual instruments from any Bluetooth audio you throw at it, so you can slip your own playing into the space a pro left behind.

On paper, the pitch is simple: stream a track from your phone, tell the amp what you want to duck, and suddenly that iconic solo is your playground. JBL is launching two versions, and they’re aimed at very different use cases. The BandBox Solo is the “bedroom musician” model: one input for a guitar or mic, a compact footprint, and a $250 price tag that basically puts it into the same impulse-buy territory as a decent multi‑effects pedal. The BandBox Trio is the “let’s make it a band thing” version, with up to four instrument inputs, more physical controls, an LCD, and a much steeper $600 sticker that clearly assumes you’ll be splitting the bill across a group or using it in more serious rehearsal settings.​

The AI angle is the headline feature, but it also says something about where practice gear is going more broadly. Instead of buying specialized “backing track” bundles, you just use the songs you already love from Spotify, Apple Music, or YouTube Music, stream them over Bluetooth, and let the amp try to carve the mix into stems in real time. That kind of separation still isn’t perfect even in studio software, so you should expect artifacts here and there, but for practicing timing, phrasing, or fills in context, “good enough” separation is often all you actually need. The real win is lowering friction: no exporting, no DAW, no editing – just connect, tap, and play.​

Around that core, JBL is basically stuffing in the kind of features that used to demand a serious pedalboard. Through the JBL One app, you can drop your signal into a chain of virtual amp models and filters that mimic a spread of modern and vintage rigs, giving you everything from clean chime to crunchy overdrive without needing an actual tube combo in the room. There are built‑in effects like phaser, chorus, reverb, a pitch shifter, and even a tuner, so the amp becomes a self-contained, gig-bag‑friendly ecosystem rather than a simple speaker. A looper is also on the roadmap; JBL says that it will land via a software update in October, which is a nice nod to the idea that this is more of a platform than a static box.

Because these are battery-powered, JBL is clearly thinking beyond the traditional amp-in-the-corner setup. The Solo is rated for up to six hours on a charge, which is enough for a couple of sessions or a long afternoon of noodling without hunting for a wall outlet. The Trio steps that up to around ten hours and adds a replaceable battery, so in theory you can hot‑swap packs and keep going all day if you’re busking, hosting a workshop, or running a jam session somewhere with questionable power access. That replaceable battery is also just a quietly practical safeguard against the usual “great product, dead pack” fate of portable gear a few years down the line.

The hardware differences between Solo and Trio are about more than just I/O count. On the Trio, JBL gives you more tactile control with an LCD and additional knobs and buttons, which means you don’t have to live inside the app just to tweak levels or make quick changes mid‑rehearsal. That matters if you’re treating it as a band hub, where one person is playing with AI stems, another has a mic, and someone else is plugged in on bass or keys – you want that front-panel overview instead of passing a phone around like a setlist. The Solo is more stripped back and leans harder on the app, which makes sense for a solo player at home who can afford to treat their phone as the main control surface.

What’s interesting here is how JBL is framing this for musicians rather than just for audiophiles. The company is better known for party speakers and portable Bluetooth boxes than for guitar gear, so stepping into the practice-amp lane with a software-heavy, AI-flavored product is a bit of a statement. It acknowledges a reality a lot of younger players live in: they’re as likely to discover a riff via TikTok or a playlist as they are via a tab book, and they expect to interact with that music in real time, not in a static, one-way “press play, then play along” format. An amp that can reshape the tracks you already listen to makes practicing feel more like remixing than homework.​

Of course, the big question is how convincing that AI stem separation will be in the wild. Isolating a lead vocal from a dense rock mix is one thing; carving out a rhythm guitar that’s panned, compressed, and glued to the drums is another. In practice, you’re probably going to get varying results depending on genre and production style: sparse pop and lo‑fi may behave nicely, while ultra‑compressed metal or busy EDM could expose the tech’s limits. But for the core audience — guitarists, vocalists, maybe bassists — even partial isolation can make a huge difference in how “inside” the track you feel.

Timing-wise, JBL is clearly positioning BandBox as something you can actually buy, not just a CES concept. Both the $250 BandBox Solo and the $600 BandBox Trio are up for pre-order on JBL’s own site now, with shipments and wider retail availability scheduled for March 1. That gives the company a bit of runway to refine the software before the looper rolls out in October and to see how players respond to this mashup of amp, smart speaker, and AI toy. If it catches on, don’t be surprised if “can this mute the original guitar part?” becomes a standard question for practice gear in the same way “does this have built‑in effects?” did a decade ago.


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