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
A familiar tale
Actually, you could make a case that Gadget gets an extra tick because of the amount of crowd-knowledge hereabouts. Helps technically and is also encouraging. On the same sort of subject, I wanted to add somewhere that I have had Abu since it was released and rarely used it, but finally got it yesterday and have spent the subsequent hours evaluating just how stupid I must be. Still only ten seconds of audio, but that's twice the world of Bilbao's five....
On the other hand, you can load 16 X 5 sec (80sec) in ONE preset of bilbao (you would need to chop them in audioshare first)
I am finding that Blocswave is now my chopper of choice.
The loop mode allows you to very quickly chop portions of any audio you bring in, to perfect 1 or 2 bar clips (which then makes it easy to stitch back together in Bilbao's piano roll).
It also automatically does a nice microfade on your chops so you almost never seem to get clicks.
It also batch exports
While you're there you can also create more creative one or two bar loops by going into the slice mode and messing around. These can also be easily exported to Gadget
If you want - you can pitch shift or BMP stretch stuff easily too, to fit your Gadget project
It's easy, also, to sample a load of notes into BlocsWave (they don't need to be timed, just play them in). Then use the slicer and the 'flatten' tools to create one note clips that can be bought into Bilabo. Or you could make a 16 or 8 hit single audio file (with perfectly spaced hits) and bring that into Abu. Thus creating your own basic sample instruments in Gadget.
So it's a great tool if you want to get audio into Gadget.
But of course. He says wisely. After being told.
My pleasure, really. The OP @db909 got me out of my narrow workspace (stale brain), and TNRs are really something...
Was pleased to discover the new kid Moebius Lab also works nicely in portrait mode, to pair with TNRe. With its 200 LFOs the TNR loops can evolve multiverses upon multiverses
I like Infinite Looper a lot, have logged fewer flight hours on it, though with his other midi tools it might scratch that CC itch a bit more directly
@Littlewoodg how do you go about using the lfos to evolve the tnr loops? Are you able to get them unrecognizable but still musical? I've been looking for a way to do something similar.
Crom! So many good gadget threads to monitor... this is getting out of hand...
Sorry brother, I didnt put that clearly...the 200 LFOs in Moebius Lab can potentially make your patch in Moebius change shape forever...a simple riff in TNR with most synths can "move" a bit for variety, but now with Moebius as the current iOS LFO king, so much voice modulation is possible that no matter how long your performance is, every go-round of even the simplest few notes can be fresh. That variety in voice, using the TNR Random layer at the same time...something to try there (but from what I can tell something like Midi Lfo or Moebius's own LFOs can't influence TNR functionality directly. But don't quote me til I finish scouring the long form manual!)
Is it something against the developers of these great apps religion.. not to implement midi import?
It will be so nice to have midi import...
midi import would be nice. Especially when so many apps have export it feels like half the equation is missing
@Matt_Fletcher_2000
Here's a couple Youtubes of the Tenori-on, functionality on view is the same as the TNRs, (except the TNRe has the extra FXs and FX automation.
One video is the Tenori-on's daddy, Mr, Iwai. The other is Kieran Hebden (Four Tet). It was interesting to see how Mr Hebden uses the mix function (R4) to "launch" his layers, and how he's built into his layers different loop lengths.
Seeing these guys reminded me why I got so excited about TNRs, when they went live (even before they had IAA). They are music workstations of a sort, but also musical instruments of a sort.