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.
Appsale Geoshred from 24.99 now 14.99
Spring Shredding Sale! from 3/1 - 3/14
Geoshred appsale from 24.99 now 14.99
GeoShred Version 2.3, an exciting update to the award-winning GeoShred musical instrument for iPad, iPhone and iPod touch, now with MIDI/MPE support. GeoShred, Winner of a 2017 Electronic Musician Editor's Choice Award as “one of the most innovative, groundbreaking products to emerge in the past twelve months”, has been enhanced with unprecedented MIDI/MPE I/O control, new effects, and additional model control parameters.
Comments
Best deal ever!! I love this app and even better with Guitarism driving it for beautiful sounding strums!
I do wish we could strum inside the app someday hopefully!
I hear this is amazing but I just can't take the leap, maybe it's something that needs to be played to be believed.
I have just loaded $30 on my iTunes account tho ...
By far, one of the best apps from these last 2 years.
And probably one of my favorite since my 7 years of Appoholism.
The touch screen, sensitivity and scale grid makes it one of
the most enjoyable to play with. The sounds are really good.
And the MIDI OUT brings it yet to another level!
I think you mentioned before having GuitarCapo+ as well, have you tried that with this? Comparison? I don't think either supports MPE, so that's moot, but perhaps there are other tradeoffs
Speaking of MPE, anyone tried this with Model 15?
just created some awesome Electric guitar patches in GeoShred playing it via Guitarism!
Will try to do a short demo.
I have to restrain myself from using Geoshred in every song I make. It's the most fun app to just jam out and play with - and I've barely even played with the new midi out/mpe. Totally worth it in my opinion. Especially if you've ever played a bit if guitar in your past - but have gotten super rusty from barely touching it over the past few years...
I gave in to the inevitable and snagged it.
It is a wonderous thing, I've barely scratched the surface (so to speak).
I can see much noodling ahead.
Yes. It's amazing...
Was curious if you'd cave.
I watched Doug's video again and wasn't feelin it at all. Only seemed a notch beyond Synthecaster to me.
Is this more of an app you'd need to kind of be a guitar player to appreciate?
No. It's good. More than anything, it's a thing unto itself.
This is what they told me about marriage. And look how that has turned out...
Hmmmm... That's kind of in the vein of what you said about Forever Beat being something different... and that turned out to be accurate.
The interface in Doug's video looks really cheesy with all the glowing/floating stars and all. Is that an old version? Or, is that how it still looks?
And, are you saying this doesn't more or less require the user be marginally proficient on the guitar?
I am a guitar player so a little biased but I'd say if you have fingers then you'll get a lot out of it. It's a breeze just to noodle around and get lots of expressive effects out of it.
And this is before I've explored MIDI out ...
Regarding the glowy bling thing, yes, it did put me off (as it does with the other Wizdom apps) but it shouldn't be a barrier.
AU$23 later I have no regrets, this thing has depth for days ...
(Edit) If no fingers toes will suffice.
It's been on my list, but thinking I might save my pesos for LayR. Can't decide. Thx!
Agree with TheVim. However I am not a guitarist but I can make it sound as though I might be.....which I don't really care about and, guessing at your interests Mister Hunt, you may not wholly either. It makes noise in a way that other things don't and it's very easy to use. It is a first class app, the only question for you (and it's hard to fathom) is whether what it does so well is what you in turn would also use. Same old.
Hmm... On sale until the 14th. Might resist a few more days. Not quite feelin this one yet. Thx for the feedback!![:) :)](https://forum.loopypro.com/resources/emoji/smile.png)
You can setup GeoShred in various play modes and many of those are found on guitars. You don't need to know how to play guitar to use these play modes, but you'll have a clearer idea of how to use them if you do.
You can configure scales, playing surface layout, the synth, the effect chains, playing modes, and the type of MIDI it sends out. The app also comes with a wide variety of presets.
It still has the stars and glowing dots in the interface which are a form of visual feedback for parameters you're playing via touch. I don't know if these can be turned off or not but they don't effect the quality of the sounds or MIDI control provided by the app.
The Moog apps and PPG synths work especially well when controlled by MIDI from GeoShred.
Do you have TC-Data? If so, how does this compare strictly as a controller?
TC-Data and GeoShred are quite different in terms of MIDI control. GeoShred supports MPE MIDI and TC-Data doesn't. GeoShred is more convential in terms of its playing surface and layouts as well as a having a more standardized way of playing versus TC-Data which can change radically from patch to patch. GeoShred has some MIDI settings for specific apps and hardware. You can create a wider variety of control setups with TC-Data. I don't really see either of these apps replacing the other for me.
Ok. I'm not arguing anything. I'm just comparing what I have and get use out of, with this other tool that's mostly unknown to me, and trying to evaluate if I'd get good use from it. Thanks for the clarification.
I considered getting TC-Data (I have TC-11 and love it especially with the new update (but where is the "hold" button?)) but to be honest I never get around to getting that deep into configuration, despite the fact I appreciate that you can (Lemur, Audulus, etc, great though they are, I barely touch).
Geoshred is more immediate with enough to configure to get all the flexibility I need. And it makes decent noises in it's own right.
I agree they are completely different apps .
I think GeoShred should appeal to most anyone who’s really played a musical instrument. If you know the experience of being able to express yourself in that way, GS gives you that feel. I think the way it responds is like playing something more physical or tangible than other virtual instrument interfaces I’ve tried. I can’t say what that would mean to someone else.
Wow. The app icon is awful.
I'm aware this is unimportant to the performance of the app but still..
Develop an app over many many months and spend 20 seconds on the icon?
It's all gawn on the bling inside. We should be grateful there isn't a flying wizard somewhere.![;) ;)](https://forum.loopypro.com/resources/emoji/wink.png)
Another triumph of functionality over icon - MIDI Guitar 2. Noodling with this today, awesome.
Yes you can turn off the sparkling stars as you play notes. It does look kinda "cheap" - I always turn off
I watched the 12min walk-thru video by the Dream Theater dude. Also watched a more recent one on Ask.audio. Before, I'd only watched the one Doug did. After these other 2 videos, I'm more intrigued.
Although the reviewers keep saying it's a layout that guitar players will "get" and really take to, it also looks like a mostly intuitive interface that non-musicians could adapt to easily as well.
Curious... if this is an app that actual guitar players would feel comfortable in, and non-guitar player or non-musicians may be able to utilize well too... does that mean that in an abstract way, Geoshred may help non-musicians better understand the guitar better? As sort of a loose gateway introduction? Or, is this so far removed with little resemblance to the real thing as to not be of much help? Sort of a "thing unto itself" as Johnny described it?
The notes are layed out like on the neck of a guitar (more accurately stringed instrument as you can specify how many strings and frets there are) and can respond to multiple touches of the same or different strings and emulates the concepts of frets, vibrato, and slides, resonant bodies, and harmonics. In auto octave mode you can change octaves by the order in which you play notes which is similar to a stringed instrument player moving up and down the neck of their instrument. On the synth sound side it does use physical modeling based upon stringed instruments and includes feedback. There are also non-string modes.
So, would you say if a non-musician become proficient play Geoshred, that the learned skill might transfer well to an actual stringed instrument, should the user ever decide to learn?