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.
Thanks for the memories Beatmaker 2
As we are getting closer to the release date of Beatmaker 3, what will you guys miss about Beatmaker 2 (from experience or just the app in general)?
Comments
The realness of it. Mostly I loved the piano roll. Best in the business for me.
I'm curious if any of the features from number two got left on the floor. What I'll miss is the hundreds of hours of practice I put in on number two. But once I've got lots of time on number three I'm sure I'll feel a lot better
Fact is, I'll have BM2 running for a long time to come, I run it (next to Genome) on a iOS 5.x iPad 1, sending sampler fun into an outboard studio (Scope Creamware)
It's one of those apps I bought and only used it once. Maybe 3 will appeal more to me.
Same here. I always found BM1 and BM2 to be a little hard to find my way around in. Kind of reminded me of my experience with Push1, I could see the benefits and appreciated them, but I never really found my flow with it. Hoping that version 3 of Beatmaker will be like Push2 and all the refinements will make it a totally different experience. From what I've seen so far, looks possible
I had no interest in BM3 based on my experience with 1 and 2. The more I've seen of 3 the more I think it could be a winner.
The piano roll, the double keyboard, the placement of the pitch bend wheel and most importantly the keyboard interface taking a backseat to the pad interface in BM3. BM2's workflow felt natural to me yet is sufficiently deep enough to keep me interested. I found Cubasis boring and Auria Pro too Pro Toolie.
The sample editor
The Nanostudio features (ok, and the chop lab and deep pad parameters).
Ability to open demo projects from BeatMaker 1, which were ace.
I used BM2 extensively on my iPhone, but only tried it once on iPad.
Once.
By the time I had Gadget with Bilbao & AbuDhabi, my relationship with BM2 was over.
I'm the complete opposite. I've never written anything in Gadget. I suspect it's the pattern sequence focus though I find the modules over-simplistic and the walled garden approach oppressive. I love deep, open ended sampling, synthesis and a linear recording environment. Being able to host AU, AB and IAA plugins in BM3 is major step up.
I won't miss anything about BM2 besides it working on the phone, returned to it over and over and over only to leave just as quickly and repeatedly..... but I've always stayed open to intua because they were open minded, they knew that the non-linear beatmachines and ableton fans outnumber the people looking for a linear styled beatmachine. Usually those types of users just use a daw so I knew that the only reason to even have a BM3 was if they made a definite change in the workflow and it's looking like they found a great way to do it without alienating their prior base which is something I always respect in a dev.
Love BM2. It's been the best keyboard style sampler on iOS since it's inception. Nothing's come close. Unlimited zones and layers. BM2 was just too deep for most and I think a lot of people were disappointed the MPC Drum Machine sampler did not have traditional drum machine step sequencer. Glad BM3 is a hybrid linear/pattern sequencer. I think it will please a lot folks.
I am working on my first bm3 track, will try and post a video by fri or sat