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 StoreLoopy Pro is your all-in-one musical toolkit. Try it for free today.
Comments
midi out. its freaking fantastic.
Erm. I'm not exactly sure. When I grabbed the Iap literally years ago it was for midi out... Does it let you email midi clips ? Cause that's another thing i can do with the full version.
On the app-sale front: Infinite Looper just went up to $14.99. So I guess I'm all in on ModStep.
Just tried it and it indeed sends midi out. Controlled several synths etc. As far as I can tell, buying the IAP gets you exporting of the midi file and sharing it. As well as, "borrowing" from other scales. I don't know enough about this stuff to know what that means.
But, I can say so far that Suggester might be what I was hoping Klimper was, ie. pick a scale, get some suggestions of chords that would work well in that scall, put the chords in a sequence, then play that sequence. And, send the midi out from that sequence to play other synths, etc.
All of that seems to work as described in the free version. Can someone explain the process by which (if I bought the IAP full unlock) that I'd use the exported midi file? ie. a scenario describing how the importing of that file would work?
Also, the only complaint I'd have is that the striking of each chord in the sequence seems abrupt. I'm guessing the term for that is "attack"? If so, how might I soften the transition between chord strikes?
I don't think I'm ready to invest the time needed to wrap my head around Modstep just yet... but was toying with getting Genome as a primer since it's onsale. However, the jury seems fairly split on whether or not Genome is useful, a waste of time... Or, much easier to use than Modstep for basic midi step sequencing.
Did you rule out Genome? If so, why?
Only because I succumbed to ModStep first.
I have come to really like it. The UI is weird but strangely gratifying. It requires practice. It's like learning a bunch of irregular verbs in a different language. And I REALLY wish there were better tutorials — just basic stuff. But I really feel like I'm learning things that will apply elsewhere.
@ExAsperis99, you are the most ambitious and geeky bass player I ever ran across!
I thought bass players were just supposed to stand to one side and look bored...> @Nathan said:
From inside the app:
What you get
- Manage an unlimited number of documents
- Gain access to all locked scales types
- Export in text mode
- Export in MIDI format
- All future upgrades
The biggies are you can only manage one chord sequence in the free version and you're limited to only major scales - so not very useful without the unlock I imagine.
It would be nice that Suggester could mix Arpeggiate and not Arpeggiated chords or combining different bpm when playing.
ha! A bass player in the studio is the guy with more time on his hands than anyone else. While everybody else is spending hours and hours trying to chase down some My Bloody Valentine guitar sound, the bass player tends to become the de facto assistant engineer. Or he takes a nap....
Too funny!
Too true!
Its definitely how I learned (and still learn). Bassists often wind up producing too, perhaps having to tie everything together in the music enables different listening, I don't know.
So I was coming back around to Egoist, largely because of a Jacob Haq video that made the app seem more versatile than the usual boring glitch out radomized business (which some people like, I get it).
But then the app just went up to $29.99, which seems completely crazy.
Borderlands' price seems to be jumping all over the place. Probably would have grabbed it at £2.99 but now I don't know if I really need it.
Yeah. It is. One can only imagine that it will wander down again. Put it on track. Having said that, it is (IMO) one of the Special Ones.
@skiphunt
>
I don't have Suggester, but I would guess that the velocity is all the way up and the chords need to be humanized or made to strum, either meaning they shouldn't all be hitting at the exact same time. You're probably stuck having to move it into a midi editor and fixing it there.
Thanks. I've mostly sorted it out. I bought the Suggester unlock. I also bought Genome Midi Sequencer since its on sale and I want to see if midi sequencing was the piece that's been missing. It was suggested to me to pass on Genome.
Figured if messing with midi wasn't for me, at least I'd only be out $5.99 to find out.
So far, I'm glad I got it. I don't want to go full Modstep just yet, but I'd like more control of composition. I don't know Genome that well yet, and I haven't found any great tutorials either. The dev's docs are vague and lacking for sure. However, it didn't take me long to get some synths connected, a few sequences going, etc. I'm hoping to find better tutorials, but I did manage to get further than I thought I was going to with just the two basic videos that are out there.
Also learned in Suggester that you can control the length of each chord played by clicking the note icon to the left of each chord. By slowing them down slightly to a "dotted half" and also slowing down the attack in each synth, it smoothed out nicely.
With the full unlock of Suggester, I can export and "open in" the midi file in Genome. Which works easily and well. Then I can refine it there to taste. It's also great because I'm not a musician, so seeing the sequence patterns that are generated by Sequencer after importing into a pattern in Genome, is a big help to have the visual. At least for me.
I was worried that I was just getting Genome because it was on sale and another OCD/addictive App Store purchase but I can already see that intuitive midi sequencing has indeed been the puzzle piece I've been missing. Suggester is a big help to me also. Glad I discovered it through this thread.
Now, if I could just find better tutorials on Genome, I think I'll be set for awhile. I hope.