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.

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phonem for ipad

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Comments

  • @rhcball said:

    @knewspeak said:

    @MonzoPro said:

    @rhcball said:
    I'll probably force myself to figure it out from sheer desperation, but vocal synthesis in general is still a long way from what i imagine it as (a complete replacement of my idiot vocal cords).

    I was hoping to use it more as a synthy choir type thing....

    Synthy thingy, yes, vocal replacement? Try vocoder?

    No, never happy with vocoders. I want to be like that japanese cartoon singer, just text and data, no body, no debt...

    …no support, no bridges to cross, no wood to burn, nothing to learn, no love, no soul, no dinner tonight, no woman, no cry, no respect, no equal rights, no garden to hoe, no seed to sow, no food in the fridge, no to shows, no emotion, no devotion, no trips to the ocean, no time to play, no lays, no way, no new, no blues, nothing to lose, no soap, no car, no cigar…

  • Had a busy day of being busy and only now getting to read through the posts for this thang; can't say you're pushing me up onto the fence let alone down the twenty dollar other side. Especially as the first day is usually apex of excitement...

  • @JohnnyGoodyear said:
    Had a busy day of being busy and only now getting to read through the posts for this thang; can't say you're pushing me up onto the fence let alone down the twenty dollar other side. Especially as the first day is usually apex of excitement...

    I would have jumped, but it's my birthday next week and as Mrs Monzo hasn't a clue what to buy a weirdo like me (aside from a new Motorhhead T-shirt, signed Alan Lee print and book about 'psychedelics, consciousness and the birth of civilisation') I'm saving it as a prezzie.

    I like the slightly ethereal vocal stuff, but behind all that there seems to be a very full, and unique sounding synth. Even if it's rubbish it'll distract me from the horror of another year passing for five minutes.

  • edited August 2016

    @u0421793 said:

    @rhcball said:

    @knewspeak said:

    @MonzoPro said:

    @rhcball said:
    I'll probably force myself to figure it out from sheer desperation, but vocal synthesis in general is still a long way from what i imagine it as (a complete replacement of my idiot vocal cords).

    I was hoping to use it more as a synthy choir type thing....

    Synthy thingy, yes, vocal replacement? Try vocoder?

    No, never happy with vocoders. I want to be like that japanese cartoon singer, just text and data, no body, no debt...

    …no support, no bridges to cross, no wood to burn, nothing to learn, no love, no soul, no dinner tonight, no woman, no cry, no respect, no equal rights, no garden to hoe, no seed to sow, no food in the fridge, no to shows, no emotion, no devotion, no trips to the ocean, no time to play, no lays, no way, no new, no blues, nothing to lose, no soap, no car, no cigar…

    That was cool.

  • hey, @funjunkie27 should hook this thing up to different drummer.

    the articulations in the samples allow for a lot of interesting results!

  • @johnfromberkeley said:
    hey, @funjunkie27 should hook this thing up to different drummer.

    the articulations in the samples allow for a lot of interesting results!

    I don't have it. Not sure it's something I'd use, but I would love to hear demos showcasing the articulations. WaveMapper is one I often use with DD with very interesting and fun outcomes.

  • edited August 2016

    I'm gettin an unacceptable amount of clips and pops for running on an air 2, freshly restarted, with no other background programs. Maybe it wasn't originally planned for a limited machine, but why bring it to one if it can't handle it.

    I've only asked for a refund once before, but probably about to cause there's other stuff I want.

  • @Fruitbat1919 said:

    @AudioGus said:
    How many presets? :blush:

    105 in the factory bank, but many are just showing off the speech features and not really any use. Will be making my own lol.

    105 in the Factories list, yes,. But choose 'List All Programs' under the Active List menu and you will see that there are actually 586 presets included with the app. Some of them are much more interesting than those in the Factory set.

  • @MonzoPro said:
    Mrs Monzo hasn't a clue what to buy a weirdo like me (aside from a new Motorhhead T-shirt..

    Have they run out of shirts slept in by Lemmy. :p

  • @amarok said:

    @Fruitbat1919 said:

    @AudioGus said:
    How many presets? :blush:

    105 in the factory bank, but many are just showing off the speech features and not really any use. Will be making my own lol.

    105 in the Factories list, yes,. But choose 'List All Programs' under the Active List menu and you will see that there are actually 586 presets included with the app. Some of them are much more interesting than those in the Factory set.

    Yep just noticed that, although many are Scales or tutorial presets. It's not packed with presets, but that would be besides the point really. All PPG apps should be programmed by you....that should be law haha.

    You need to mess with those settings. It's like getting a Moog and never turning the filter knob - a crime! ;)

  • @Brain said:
    'Phonem for iPad' - has there been ANY music app worth a damn that came out for the iPhone first?

    Nanostudio, Thumbjam, Loopy, Nlog, Funkbox, Filtatron, BeatMaker... Of course, there was no ipad yet when they first launched but there you go. ;)

  • @Nkersov said:

    @MonzoPro said:
    Mrs Monzo hasn't a clue what to buy a weirdo like me (aside from a new Motorhhead T-shirt..

    Have they run out of shirts slept in by Lemmy. :p

    He bought me a pint once. He was tiny - I wouldn't want to wear his cast offs, but to be honest I don't think they'd fit me!

  • Not sure if this video has been posted but it really helped me getting started with Phonem

    What a fantastic synth

  • @jn2002dk said:
    Not sure if this video has been posted but it really helped me getting started with Phonem

    What a fantastic synth

    This is for the desktop version, but still quite interesting. Yes, it's a really good synth, and probably the best vocoder to appear for IOS. But you do need a degree in boffin to work it properly. :'(

  • I already watched that tutorial and if anything, it put me off getting it (which is unusual!). I am sure it is very capable, but also very complex to edit and the saving of your own presets seems needlessly complicated.

  • @PhilW said:
    I already watched that tutorial and if anything, it put me off getting it (which is unusual!). I am sure it is very capable, but also very complex to edit and the saving of your own presets seems needlessly complicated.

    I don't think it was overly helpful in some ways. Yes it can be complex, but you can dig sounds out of it in many ways. You don't need to know how to use it all at once to get useful sounds.

    The saving is not too complex on the iOS version once you know it's way of working. I'm biased though, as I've used the other PPG apps for a while.

  • Thanks for posting that tutorial, cleared up a few things.

    Delivery was a touch slow, Youtube's playback speed setting made it a lot easier to watch, watched this one at 2x speed.

  • @richardyot said:
    Thanks for posting that tutorial, cleared up a few things.

    Delivery was a touch slow, Youtube's playback speed setting made it a lot easier to watch, watched this one at 2x speed.

    His voice.......has a. Very........zzzz.....calming.

    Effec........t......

  • @Nkersov said:

    @jn2002dk said:
    Not sure if this video has been posted but it really helped me getting started with Phonem

    What a fantastic synth

    This is for the desktop version, but still quite interesting. Yes, it's a really good synth, and probably the best vocoder to appear for IOS. But you do need a degree in boffin to work it properly. :'(

    Besides a few UI differences like the mod matrix i found everything he did in the vid was the same in the app

  • When Phonem is loaded into AUM as AU it seems that there is only access to 1 page.
    Is there a way to expand that window and access the other Phonem edit pages?

  • @dreamrobe said:
    When Phonem is loaded into AUM as AU it seems that there is only access to 1 page.
    Is there a way to expand that window and access the other Phonem edit pages?

    No, read the manual. AU(X) is sort of stripped down a bit.

  • @rhcball said:

    @dreamrobe said:
    When Phonem is loaded into AUM as AU it seems that there is only access to 1 page.
    Is there a way to expand that window and access the other Phonem edit pages?

    No, read the manual. AU(X) is sort of stripped down a bit.

    I could be wrong though, that manual isnt the easiest reading

  • edited August 2016

    @Fruitbat1919 said:
    You need to mess with those settings. It's like getting a Moog and never turning the filter knob - a crime! ;)

    Last night I was talking with McKay Garner about patch design. We talked about two things:

    1. Learning from other people's presets. Presets are awesome for learning. Tweaking knobs on presets helps you naturally learn what they do.

    2. Recreating presets from scratch. Often I'll hear a preset that inspires me. I'll go back to an init, and build the patch out as I heard it. What you end up with is a unique preset with naturally different elements emphasized and sound.

    Just my 2¢.

  • @johnfromberkeley said:

    @Fruitbat1919 said:
    You need to mess with those settings. It's like getting a Moog and never turning the filter knob - a crime! ;)

    Last night I was talking with McKay Garner about patch design. We talked about two things:

    1. Learning from other people's presets. Presets are awesome for learning. Tweaking knobs on presets helps you naturally learn what they do.

    2. Recreating presets from scratch. Often I'll hear a preset that inspires me. I'll go back to an init, and build the patch out as I heard it. What you end up with is a unique preset with naturally different elements emphasized and sound.

    Just my 2¢.

    I think that's why my brain likes PPG apps like WaveMapper, because different elements of the sound can be easily looked at alone and then combined. You can take ideas from different presets and use them to combine with your own segments to make something totally different.

    Taking presets and just using the envelopes, say it's set up for a typical lead sound. Then change the Wavetables in each segment. Maybe add a percussive sound in one Osc and change its envelopes and put it with a pad as a body for the sound. Add an element of shimmering fx over the top and new sound city.

    I can understand the need to know what envelopes are doing, but when you mess with sounds often and there are multiple envelopes, it's nice to be able to speed things up with sound element samples to just tweak when fine sculpting the sound.

  • @Fruitbat1919 said:

    @johnfromberkeley said:

    @Fruitbat1919 said:
    You need to mess with those settings. It's like getting a Moog and never turning the filter knob - a crime! ;)

    Last night I was talking with McKay Garner about patch design. We talked about two things:

    1. Learning from other people's presets. Presets are awesome for learning. Tweaking knobs on presets helps you naturally learn what they do.

    2. Recreating presets from scratch. Often I'll hear a preset that inspires me. I'll go back to an init, and build the patch out as I heard it. What you end up with is a unique preset with naturally different elements emphasized and sound.

    Just my 2¢.

    I think that's why my brain likes PPG apps like WaveMapper, because different elements of the sound can be easily looked at alone and then combined. You can take ideas from different presets and use them to combine with your own segments to make something totally different.

    Taking presets and just using the envelopes, say it's set up for a typical lead sound. Then change the Wavetables in each segment. Maybe add a percussive sound in one Osc and change its envelopes and put it with a pad as a body for the sound. Add an element of shimmering fx over the top and new sound city.

    I can understand the need to know what envelopes are doing, but when you mess with sounds often and there are multiple envelopes, it's nice to be able to speed things up with sound element samples to just tweak when fine sculpting the sound.

    I would like to see someone design an iOS synth with a semi modular architecture where it has multiple routing to filters and bypass. Add to this some IAA and Au slots for fx filter apps to be used for filtering the Oscs too. Kinda like a cross between Thor and Moebius Lab.

    I'm off subject aren't I lol

  • @syrupcore said:

    @Brain said:
    'Phonem for iPad' - has there been ANY music app worth a damn that came out for the iPhone first?

    Nanostudio, Thumbjam, Loopy, Nlog, Funkbox, Filtatron, BeatMaker... Of course, there was no ipad yet when they first launched but there you go. ;)

    Yep - those are definitely give-a-damners!

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