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 Store

Loopy Pro is your all-in-one musical toolkit. Try it for free today.

Who are you? Music or Tech demographic

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Comments

  • edited December 2017

    In 1983, when I was 17, I wrote a somewhat PacMan-like game for my Homecomputer ColorGenieEG2000 and sold it. It included a "selfmade" musical theme based on the melody of Swing Low Sweet Chariot.
    Guess that makes me a computer guy who happens to make music.
    Age 51
    Contemporary Pop with vocals.

  • Music person I think. I hope.
    23. (Would I be considered a kid around here now?)
    Hardest question to answer with one word. Best I can say is I’m trying to see what I can do :smile:

  • The user and all related content has been deleted.
  • I don’t feel so old after reading this thread. Still in the upper age limits... but not alone...

  • @AudioGus said:

    @AnimalHeadSpirit said:
    Starting as a child, first passion was music...always been into tech as well, first computer was Apple 2, then moved to the dark side in my early teen years with my “massively powerful” 486 sx/25 mhz DOS 5.1 / windows 3.1 computer , one of the first with 1x CD-ROM: Tandy Sensation - ended up being the first time the marriage of computer tech + music occured in my life. (Used to dabble in .MOD trackers) - wish I went with Amiga instead, as I was blown away when introduced to the capabilties up a BBS friend’s Amiga based music studio ..


    We were ballers.

    Those were the days, mate. Chillin like a villain.

    I’ve rarely found a musician enthusiest community as decent as this one since the early 90s local BBS scene. You guys sure open the memory floodgate. :)

  • I guess both, but really I am a guitar player first and foremost who was seduced by the power of the mighty SynthLord... (2006 I purchased a Korg Electribe and a Microkorg instead of a new guitar...changed my life :lol: )
    37
    Live-ProgDublectroFunkhopHippyStepwave-Looping.......errr something like that.......
    I’m just gonna call it FUB for short....
    FUBstep...yeah that’s it...
    You witnessed it right here first folks...
    The latest and greatest quasi-sub-genre within a micro-sub-genre to flood Beatport and Soundcloud...
    Your welcome... :smiley:

  • Number 1. 17ys. Good

  • interesting, with few exceptions looks this is 30yo+ club :-)

  • Computer since the 60's. Still day job, but several times day job has included making music tools using computers (Line Wolf MidiTap, FireWire DICE II chip prototype (used by Alesis), Nintendo WiiU and Switch audio engines)

    Age 70

    New Agey / trancey jams, and some other bad stuff

  • Made a living playing french horn the 1st ten years of my teen-adult life, then made a way better living with computers for the next 35. 62
    Started playing guitar a few years back and that is my primary instrument now, do keyboard as well.
    I am as much, if not more interested in what devs and users are doing with the iPad/iPhone/multi-touch/portability/motion detection/etc.

  • Neither :s

  • Tech guy. Just started dabbling with music recently.
    39.
    Nothing, but love the sounds of synthesizers. Sometimes I even make 4 bars of something that sounds nice to my ears.

  • @RUST( i )K said:
    Do you consider yourself a music person who uses computers to make music?
    or
    Do you consider yourself a computer person who happens to make music?

    Age:
    Type music you make: (1 word)

    • I’m a music person who sometimes uses various types of computers to make music
    • I’m 37
    • Unsuccessful
    • What about you?
  • deskjob with computer, too clumsy for instrument -> therefor sequencers and daw
    58
    i wish i could achieve what i want.
    (slow <80 bpm, funky, industrial, polyrythymic, Steve-Reich/Glenn Branca like, dissonant, unusual time signatures: all at once)

    @wim said:
    Type of music: is there a genre for “really cool 4 bar loops of all types that never turn into songs”?

  • Tech guy who once tried (unsuccessfully) seducing girls with a guitar
    43
    Cuscolima

  • Musician who uses computers
    23
    Shoegaze/dreampop/indie and sometimes some awful DnB

  • edited February 2018

    Option 1
    Age 33

    Alsorts

  • Musician first
    61
    Carnival

  • Musician - Down through the ages - Prog, Country -rock (not so proud of that phase), Jazz, Prog.
    65 and counting
    Mostly Ambient Soundscapes influenced by contemporary European Jazz

  • edited February 2018

    Sax was my first weapon. Traded my Sax for a Glock in 9th grade in order to survive my trek to school. Traded the glock for a Mac to get paid and escape the grave/cage. Moved south to Atl when Hip Hop was building the New Hotlanta. Found a midi controller (EWI) I’d already mastered in a previous life (SAX).

    Writer/Producer/DJ/Musician/Hacker making Hip Hop4Life, Funk, Jazz or anything Groovy. Equal parts Musician/Techie...thus—EWI5000, IPad, BM3, Gadget and Nanokey Studio.

  • I am a musician using computers, and I really like combining the two, but have a fascination with any kind of acoustic instrument as well. I am interested in musical sound, noise, acoustics, perception, and the physical effects of sound on the environment and its inhabitants.

    I am 48.
    The music I make, in one word, is probably best described as Experimental.

  • @CracklePot said:
    I am a musician using computers, and I really like combining the two, but have a fascination with any kind of acoustic instrument as well. I am interested in musical sound, noise, acoustics, perception, and the physical effects of sound on the environment and its inhabitants.

    I am 48.
    The music I make, in one word, is probably best described as Experimental.

    I would have guessed like 30 by your posts!

    So you seem young in your energy so that is awesome!

  • @ageezz said:
    Musician - Down through the ages - Prog, Country -rock (not so proud of that phase), Jazz, Prog.
    65 and counting
    Mostly Ambient Soundscapes influenced by contemporary European Jazz

    What is European Jazz?

    I know jazz Europe... got it.

    But how is it different?

  • @WillieNegus said:
    Sax was my first weapon. Traded my Sax for a Glock in 9th grade in order to survive my trek to school. ...

    Gee whiz - not too many Glockenspiel players around here, and even fewer that have the chops to use it for self-defense.

  • @wim said:

    @WillieNegus said:
    Sax was my first weapon. Traded my Sax for a Glock in 9th grade in order to survive my trek to school. ...

    Gee whiz - not too many Glockenspiel players around here, and even fewer that have the chops to use it for self-defense.

    You'll be amazed.

  • @RUST( i )K said:

    @ageezz said:
    Musician - Down through the ages - Prog, Country -rock (not so proud of that phase), Jazz, Prog.
    65 and counting
    Mostly Ambient Soundscapes influenced by contemporary European Jazz

    What is European Jazz?

    I know jazz Europe... got it.

    But how is it different?

    I think there is a particular vibe in some of the Ambient/jazz music coming from Northern Europe compared to many other places specially the US. Much more genre crossing - for me it started with Nils Petter Molvaer in the 2000s through to the mind/soundscapes of Arve Henriksen, Jan Bang and Eivind Aarset.

  • @wim said:
    Both developed in parallel. They intersected about 1999 to my total delight. I make my living in tech and fill up the rest with music. B)

    Age: in denial. :s

    Type of music: is there a genre for “really cool 4 bar loops of all types that never turn into songs”?

    Yeah, Contemporary Pop or something like that. ;)

  • edited February 2018

    Musician whose creative goals are supported by technology. Played in rock bands & mucked about with 4 track recorders back in the day, although sometime between then and now (~15 years ago) I changed career path to IT. So... I do like computers but I love music

    43

    Modern rock featuring lots of crunchy guitar and spacey synth :)

    The impression I have is that most iOS folk are into producing ambient/dance/experimental/hip hop - not too many doing stuff with guitar, which I find curious. It’s all good of course!

  • @zeroG said:
    Musician whose creative goals are supported by technology. Played in rock bands & mucked about with 4 track recorders back in the day, although sometime between then and now (~15 years ago) I changed career path to IT. So... I do like computers but I love music

    43

    Modern rock featuring lots of crunchy guitar and spacey synth :)

    The impression I have is that most iOS folk are into producing ambient/dance/experimental/hip hop - not too many doing stuff with guitar, which I find curious. It’s all good of course!

    There are still quite a few of us Guitar wranglers around here. I was surprised as well. B)

  • @CracklePot said:

    @zeroG said:
    Musician whose creative goals are supported by technology. Played in rock bands & mucked about with 4 track recorders back in the day, although sometime between then and now (~15 years ago) I changed career path to IT. So... I do like computers but I love music

    43

    Modern rock featuring lots of crunchy guitar and spacey synth :)

    The impression I have is that most iOS folk are into producing ambient/dance/experimental/hip hop - not too many doing stuff with guitar, which I find curious. It’s all good of course!

    There are still quite a few of us Guitar wranglers around here. I was surprised as well. B)

    We’re a dying breed I sometimes think.

    And to be honest, it’s a lot easier to noodle on the couch with a bunch of synths and drum apps than to set up and record guitar, and to actually have to play stuff right without the luxury of a piano roll editor. My guitars stare scornfully down at me from their lonely hangers on the wall so many days.

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