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
cool graph. it took me a minute to realize the numbers were not thousands, the comma threw me off. lol....
In a thread about a guy spending $3,300 on apps, I think keeping in mind that these are non-transferable and have no value beyond the use we get out of them is poignant.
Over the course of 7 years.
I'm not going to even try to figure it out. However, since 2010, I've picked up 3 guitars; several audio/midi interfaces; microphones, keyboard/controller; monitors; headphones; cables; and a host of music apps. Further, this appoholic stuff is nonsense. When my family and friends inquire or as they say, "intervene", I just tell them "I'm holding it for a friend."
The huge majority of apps I've bought have been on sale and bought with discounted iTunes cards. So I believe I am well under $1000.
And now wanting to get more into hardware and a lot less iOS this could lose all value soon. But having spent this amount on apps it makes me reluctant to turn my back on the platform.
i have a friend who has spent this on overwatch lately:
Game $89
3x100 loot boxes $120
$449 just on one of many games he plays
I've spent a lot too and in the space of less than two years.
I don't have that sort of money now, but if I did, I would now just supplement my iOS music making with hardware. I would like more iPads and lots of things with twiddly knobs and sliders.
Even if my situation changes I'm about all app'd out. The buzz has dwindled now. Each new app just seems more of the same or close enough.
Now I want mics, guitars, keybeds, controllers and many more iPads for more surface area to control all my apps.
"App'd out" +1. The neural pathway for app aquisition has been firmly established so watch out...lol. I agree though it would be nice to have more surface area.. have you been good this year?
I worked on a soccer mobile game where someone legitimately spent over $10,000.
My main concern with digital in music wasn't sound quality so much (early '90's digital did sound shitty though) as it was it's intangibility.
In 2005 you could've spent some serious money on the pre-Avid Digidesign Pro Tools HD setup and be lucky to have made it to 2010 with it still viable and not near obsolescence... forget about using it all the last few years. Plus the only tangible elements like hard drives and CD/DVD burns aren't guaranteed to last forever.
My point is, like it or not, our society is raging consumer culture that offers many goods & services that are great but not permanent. I have over 200 apps on my Air 2 iPad, which is for recording music only, and the vast majority of the apps are to serve that purpose. It has got like YouTube and SoundCloud and a few other apps for reference but not very many.
I knew as I started using iOS aps my main recording platform I'd be updating apps and benefits and value. Which is what the key to this whole topic is. I know I've spent over $500 easy on apps but the bang for the buck value I got was incredible. Hell, I couldn't buy a MIM Fender Strat & amp for that. Or a decent pro/am drum kit with cymbals.
The incredible value of iOS music production apps should make any investment in getting them seem like a steal...just my two cents.
Be cool...
Ive spent 1600 or so over the last two and a half years. I've also spent about the same (Minilogue, used Moog Rogue, some effects pedals) over the same period. I feel like I've gotten way more value and education out of the iPad. I don't regret it for a second.
I added my purchases up thinking, 'Man I probably could have gotten a Dave Smith OB-6 by now', but nope, barely halfway there via iTunes. And just barely there including the hardware purchases. And that's not factoring in enjoying all of these apps/things over the last 2.5 years.
Yes it is, where can i find it & use it for myself?
Where could i see/find this on the ipad?
I do equate mine to a room of hardware, but in reverse. I sold my hardware for about £20K a number of years ago, so I see my app purchasing as being significantly smaller amount, but bringing as much fun and functionality. While the software has no resale and limited shelf life, at least it doesn't depreciate like some hardware (I think my Akai S6000 with SCSI drive, went for under 1% of the original price!)
3300 x 30% = $990 = Apples cut, straight into Apples pockets as an entrance fee for you and the developers. Compare that to the prices of the devices, as well as the fact that as we get more and more locked in, we are more likely to stay in. I have once tried to break out for my telephone, but realised I had too much invested in AppStore and being unwilling to pay for it all again, so I stay and continue spending money where I've started.