Loopy Pro: Create music, your way.

What is Loopy Pro?Loopy Pro is a powerful, flexible, and intuitive live looper, sampler, clip launcher and DAW for iPhone and iPad. At its core, it allows you to record and layer sounds in real-time to create complex musical arrangements. But it doesn’t stop there—Loopy Pro offers advanced tools to customize your workflow, build dynamic performance setups, and create a seamless connection between instruments, effects, and external gear.

Use it for live looping, sequencing, arranging, mixing, and much more. Whether you're a live performer, a producer, or just experimenting with sound, Loopy Pro helps you take control of your creative process.

Download on the App Store

Loopy Pro is your all-in-one musical toolkit. Try it for free today.

This looks amazing!

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Comments

  • kymatica doesn't f-around!

  • woah. I'm in.

  • @mgmg4871 said:
    Can't wait.

    When?

  • Looks awesome!! I hope it is also for the iPhone. :-)

  • @Audiojunkie said:
    Looks awesome!! I hope it is also for the iPhone. :-)

    It is !

  • Yes, but what exactly is it and what does it actually do?

  • @dblonde said:
    Yes, but what exactly is it and what does it actually do?

    Lol.... thought the same. A while ago i asked for something like a modulator..... maybe it is? Whatever, iPhone version sounds good ;)

  • It's a mixer with built in IAA effects sends.

  • edited October 2015

    and like all kya apps it will be lightweight / efficiant & will be real fun!

    i am sowas von in ;-)

  • looking good :) Didn't know it was going to have a keyboard.

    After he's finished and released that I hope he has a little breather....Perhaps a cup of tea and a biscuit.
    And then starts making his effects apps as AU units so we can use multiple instances in MTS :)

  • It looks good indeed :)

    With the keyboard in place, what's stopping 'auto-chord' and 'arpeggio' from getting implemented at the same time and well a basic 'Kymatica-Style' Wave & Piano-roll editors since it already offers recording options... (Maybe it already records one file per track and a 'mix down' who knows?).

  • @syrupcore said:
    It's a mixer with built in IAA effects sends.

    Mmhhh, thank's! Would be great if i could modulate the sliders/knobs/sends for some great crossfading action.

  • Would be cool to see AudioShare go multitrack, with the ability to route this mixer's tracks output separately, because then you'd have a Kymatica modular DAW.

  • Or he could make something similar to Adobe Audition 6

  • Fine Ambience and always feeling cozy at home with Kymatica.

  • edited October 2015

    Hmm, so is it something equivalent of Audiobus, with advanced midi control included ?
    Does IAA supports state saving ?

  • @Carnbot said:
    looking good :) Didn't know it was going to have a keyboard.

    Me either. That and start stop buttons are a really really good idea.

    Anyone know what the little tan and white resister icon is? Is it a routing point? Send maybe?

    I don't want most of the features people have mentioned. I want it to be a super duper efficient mixer with smart effects inclusion and MIDI control.

    Hopefully it has multiple outs so that you can either send them through separate physical outputs or to your favorite DAW as separate tracks. 2 or 3 LFOs sounds boss though. :) But even that could be handled with midiLFOs.

  • This post getting hot, screen shot erased...Well hope to see it live soon :)

  • @syrupcore said:

    what he said

  • The Good Mr J_Lilla should just come an enlighten us but here's what I can determine from the screenshot (see a larger screenshot on Twitter):

    Speculation:

    1. Yes, that little tan graphic is a send. There are little led meter looking things next to both of them. I'm guessing those aren't meters but are actually draggable send amounts.
    2. It has multiple bus/send routes within it. Channels 1-3 are all going to Bus A which is the input for channel 4 which is going to the speaker output. The sends are all going to send bus B. I'm assuming the difference between a bus and a send are the traditional differences (sends can have an amount whereas a bus gets the entire post-dader signal.
    3. The thin white line going from the faders to the effects path indicate the division of pre/post fader. iSem has a single post fader send. Sector has to pre fader sends. Animoog has a AUFX:Space set to prefader and Send B set to post fader. I don't see volume controls (send amounts) on the items before the line so I'm thinking it's more like an insert?
    4. He needs to insert AUFX:Push on the output because it's peaking. :)
    5. It sends clock and SPP (there are tempo and measure:beat/time displays above the transport.
    6. I think track 3 is muted. That would indicate you can't solo a muted track. :(
    7. Keyboard has a "hold" feature, indicated by the infinity symbol

    Wish I could see what's after the send on track three. Does anyone recognize the tip of the icon?

    And from the original tweet: "The new mixer app, now also with built-in keyboard to play hosted AUv3 instruments. Can also route external midi."

    Just, DAYUM! This is looking like the thing you load first in 2016. At one point, I questioned someone on the forum's suggestion this would be competition for AB. I'm now questioning my questioning. It looks like it has the bulk of the most often requested AB features rolled into a single app.

  • edited October 2015

    @syrupcore said:

    Wish I could see what's after the send on track three. Does anyone recognize the tip of the icon?

    Looks like BITWIZ to me.

    Also... Great post Sherlock! ;)

  • edited October 2015

    @SpookyZoo said:
    @syrupcore said:Wish I could see what's after the send on track three. Does anyone recognize the tip of the icon? Looks like BITWIZ to me. Also... Great post Sherlock! ;)

    Was/is a great post.

  • @1P18 said:
    Would be cool to see AudioShare go multitrack, with the ability to route this mixer's tracks output separately, because then you'd have a Kymatica modular DAW.

    This is my dream and would completely satisfy what I want out of iOS recording. I appreciate the other DAW attempts at recreating a full desktop environment, but I don't need all that. I just want something efficient and bug free, which I know is what we'd get based on the deveoper's track record.

  • edited November 2015

    @oat_phipps have you checked out Multitrack DAW? Low frills, very efficient and famously solid. If this has multiple AB outs, it will be the perfect companion.

    Of course, maybe it already is a DAW and we just don't know it. That bars:beats above the transport could be for its internal song recorder. :)

  • edited November 2015

    Confirmed on twitter: Will work on both iPhone and iPad. W00t.

    I don't see anything about AudioBus in the screenshot. Hoping this isn't IAA only—I want to create AB chains going both to and from this app. Maybe it's because I rarely use IAA (I'm slow to change). Plus, you know, state saving.

    Wonder if the second release of this app (or maybe the first, depending on how far out we are) will support AUs? Like, maybe even AU versions of AUFX. :)

  • Interesting to read your speculations! :)

    Most of syrupcore's points are true!

    Yes, the resistor symbols are sends. They send to a bus. A channel can also output directly to a bus. A channel can use a bus as input. A bus is simply an "invisible" wire that can be used as input, output and be sent to with variable amount. In this regard, this mixer does not distinguish between AUX sends and sub groups / busses as on a typical hardware mixer, a bus in this app serves both functions.
    Also, each bus will have an IAA and Audiobus output port. It will also have Audiobus inputs.

    Yes, it supports multichannel hardware interfaces, both for input and output.

    The preferred way of synchronizing stuff is through IAA sync, that's why it shows tempo and beats:bars, because IAA sync has both normal time (as in seconds) and beats and tempo. It does not send SPP, but I will probably add a MIDI clock send for IAA nodes that doesn't support IAA sync.

    The effects are inserts, use a bus send and a bus channel to send multiple channels mixed into a single effect chain. The wire between fader and fx slots indicates pre/post, which can be changed easily by the user.

    Not apparent on the screenshot: the fx's can be reordered by dragging them.

    Yes, it supports AUv3 on iOS 9. Such audio units will display their UI as a movable window inside this app (like in a desktop DAW), that's also the reason I needed to include a keyboard. One can also route MIDI from anywhere to the hosted apps. Connect a bunch of hardware MIDI keyboards and let each one control an individual synth, for example.

    It will not be a DAW, but will have a built-in recorder that records straight into a folder inside AudioShare (no need to "export" them there). I haven't implemented the recorder yet, but my idea is that one can record each channel separately, and use a bus if you want to record a mix, or several submixes, etc..

    The main point with this app is to be a super-flexible mixer. It will not have any "generators" like sequencers, LFOs or arpeggiators. Those should be implemented in separate apps and routed through virtual MIDI.

    Cheers
    /Jonatan

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