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.

Lost the will to create?

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Comments

  • Haven't been doing much lately, but can heartily recommend dipping into The Song of the Month Club. Whether you do one or many it's an excellent 'deadline' mechanism amongst friends etc....

  • wimwim
    edited December 2018

    Combine butter, 1/2 cup sugar, vanilla extract, and salt in the mixing bowl of a stand mixer; mix ingredients thoroughly with a paddle attachment. Mix flour into butter mixture to make a smooth dough. Press dough into a 9-inch tart pan; refrigerate crust for 30 minutes.
    Preheat oven to 350 degrees F (175 degrees C).
    Bake crust until light golden brown, 15 to 20 minutes.
    Whisk sugar, eggs, lemon zest, lemon juice, and 1/2 cup flour in a bowl until smooth. 5. 6. Pour lemon filling into crust. Cover edges of crust with strips of aluminum foil to prevent burning.
    Bake tart until filling is set, about 20 minutes. Cool completely and dust with confectioners' sugar.

  • @RedSkyLullaby we musicians are hedonists in general.
    We make music because we enjoy it and it calls to us. I'm a pretty prolific person but I've gone periods like a year at a time, where I do little of what I normally do but I seem to always be learning something useful. One year I was more into photography, videography, and learning techniques for editing in post , computer modeling for the purpose of creating special effects......but not much music. I'm glad I took time away, but I can't say it was my decision. Sometimes I should be writing...I've told people who are counting on my writing soon, tomorrow, tomorrow and tommorrow again and couldn't for the life of me just turn on my computer. Also, life fuels art. One needs to live life sometimes to replenish the emotional excitement. So when I am feeling it...I'll do one song after another and before long I've caught up. 2018 was a very rough year for me, but I wrote and recorded about 46 songs and did a few covers. To that though, I gave up going out on the weekend, getting laid, and not doing very much of anything fun, and I wrote some of the best riffs and songs in my life. Now I"m like...fuck, what do I do now...lol. So maybe we can swap places! LOL

  • @JohnnyGoodyear said:
    Snogging is so much more fun than giving birth....

    Perfect

  • @robertreynolds said:

    @RedSkyLullaby said:
    Just realized while I have created alot of sounds in 2018 I have not actually put out any music (Other than app jam videos) since 2017. Bit of a shock to my system to get back to making some actual tunes in 2019

    Maybe it’s because you’re working hard in a field you love? Try doing something non-related to music for a week and I bet the songs start flowing.

    Yeah, prob true. I have a day job I like that is nothing to do with music. I obviously must enjoy sound design more than composition, I thinking happening to see release date of last EP just made me realize something very obvious

  • @gusgranite said:
    Hey, I’m in the no TV club as well. I would rather be making music.

    So 2018 was my first year for producing music. I got a handful of tracks completed. I’m really excited about 2019.

    I’m trying to live by the mantra - Be useful. Be creative.

    @RedSkyLullaby - you are a creative soul. Good luck in 2019!

    Thanks you too

  • @ajmiller said:
    I play cornet in a local community brass band and do around an hour a day practising to keep my chops in shape. I’m writing backing tracks for a jazz covers project I want to do live. iOS music making is fairly new to me and I’m in the early stages experimenting (and learning synthesis) to see how I can use it to add another dimension to my playing. I run my own business from home so can spread this over the day. I’m committed to getting six tracks written and recorded in 2019!
    Btw - I never watch TV etc and, like @LinearLineman, I’m older so the ultimate deadline is always on the horizon!! Good luck with whatever music you do in 2019 - its all good!

    6 tracks in 2019, I’m in

  • The Ringmakers of Saturn:

    Before you write this off as some oddball YouTube video, take in mind that this guy worked for NASA, hardly a fringe organization. Also be warned, it is a slog of a video, bogged down at times with academia. Then all of a sudden he'll say something that kind of makes you do a double take and rewind the video to make sure you heard it right.

    At the very least the video will make you want to bust out (or buy) Cassini Synth. :)

    The Apostle Paul said that we know in part. It's a humbling thought, and humbleness is a good place to be. Can't get knocked down from the place of humbleness.

  • @e121 said:
    The Ringmakers of Saturn:

    Before you write this off as some oddball YouTube video, take in mind that this guy worked for NASA, hardly a fringe organization. Also be warned, it is a slog of a video, bogged down at times with academia. Then all of a sudden he'll say something that kind of makes you do a double take and rewind the video to make sure you heard it right.

    At the very least the video will make you want to bust out (or buy) Cassini Synth. :)

    The Apostle Paul said that we know in part. It's a humbling thought, and humbleness is a good place to be. Can't get knocked down from the place of humbleness.

    And yes that's Ringmakers, not just Rings, of Saturn.

  • edited December 2018

    @e121 not sure why you posted that here but that’s some wild claims! Haven’t watched yet but I love stuff like that. Came across his book PDF while looking for a summary of the video.

    http://podcast.sjrdesign.net/files/070_RingmakersOfSaturn.pdf
    (Under 3 mb)

  • @Kühl
    Not sure why you think I’m American - North Yorkshire, U.K. here! Mind, at present I think we’ve lost perspective too. ( I have nothing against Americans btw x )

    @Kühl said
    I never watch tv either... just catch up News on YouTube. Not American news, you’ve lost perspective 😆 😈

  • Small, portable, battery powered items such as ipads, volcas, pocket operators etc have been a musical revelation for me over the past few years. I have no fixed studio space, only what i can clear on the dining room table once everybody has gone to bed. An ipad becomes part of the daily clutter. You can fiddle with apps, grab audio off Youtube, sample something that catches your ear with the built-in mic, trim samples, try out ideas etc... all while you're NOT making music!! Hell, the built in speakers are good enough, you don't even have to find a pair of headphones. Inspiration doesn't ring ahead, it comes when you're cooking the kids' dinner, or on the bus, or waiting for the family to get ready, or at a whole heap of other times when you are not sitting down in front of your gear.

    So it's the ability to capture those sparks of inspiration, quickly getting those fleeting ideas into something slightly more concrete, this has been one of the main benefits of the ipad for me. It's pretty much to hand during every waking hour, complete with a (modest) selection of tools that can be put to use very quickly to capture that idea in whatever form it takes. So when i do finally get proper time to make music, i'm never staring miserably at a blank slate. The admin has been done already...

    Similar with the pocket operators, the ultimate "take to work, slope off and jam somewhere" devices. If they are your thing, then within minutes you've got a handful of patterns to jam with/feed your sampler, all ready to go for when you finally get time to sit in front of your gear.

    Anyway, peace to you all, happy holidays and i hope 2019 will be a creative year!

  • @e121 said:
    The Ringmakers of Saturn:

    Before you write this off as some oddball YouTube video, take in mind that this guy worked for NASA, hardly a fringe organization. Also be warned, it is a slog of a video, bogged down at times with academia. Then all of a sudden he'll say something that kind of makes you do a double take and rewind the video to make sure you heard it right.

    At the very least the video will make you want to bust out (or buy) Cassini Synth. :)

    The Apostle Paul said that we know in part. It's a humbling thought, and humbleness is a good place to be. Can't get knocked down from the place of humbleness.

    Ok, this is one of those genuinely weird moments..,,

    I just shared the David Icke vid for this stuff with a friend, browsed some of the ‘electromagnetic vehicle’ images, and was considering naming my next album ‘The Ringmakers of Saturn’.

    Could be we just got pushed similar videos by the YouTube algorithms, but seeing this post immediately after watching this stuff is a very weird coincidence.

  • edited December 2018

    @apapdop said:
    Small, portable, battery powered items such as ipads, volcas, pocket operators etc have been a musical revelation for me over the past few years. I have no fixed studio space, only what i can clear on the dining room table once everybody has gone to bed. An ipad becomes part of the daily clutter. You can fiddle with apps, grab audio off Youtube, sample something that catches your ear with the built-in mic, trim samples, try out ideas etc... all while you're NOT making music!! Hell, the built in speakers are good enough, you don't even have to find a pair of headphones. Inspiration doesn't ring ahead, it comes when you're cooking the kids' dinner, or on the bus, or waiting for the family to get ready, or at a whole heap of other times when you are not sitting down in front of your gear.

    So it's the ability to capture those sparks of inspiration, quickly getting those fleeting ideas into something slightly more concrete, this has been one of the main benefits of the ipad for me. It's pretty much to hand during every waking hour, complete with a (modest) selection of tools that can be put to use very quickly to capture that idea in whatever form it takes. So when i do finally get proper time to make music, i'm never staring miserably at a blank slate. The admin has been done already...

    Definitely.

    Ive only been on the iPad music for less than a year and so far have only used it to play live, but a lot of those midi patterns and patches used were put together on the subway.

    I do struggle to finish lyrics sometimes though. I get bursts of inspiration, write half a song and then a burst a year or two later. When I try to force my hand at them, they suck. Music less so, I kinda always have cool riiffs imho.

  • @RedSkyLullaby we musicians are hedonists in general.
    We make music because we enjoy it and it calls to us. I'm a pretty prolific person but I've gone periods like a year at a time, where I do little of what I normally do but I seem to always be learning something useful. One year I was more into photography, videography, and learning techniques for editing in post , computer modeling for the purpose of creating special effects......but not much music. I'm glad I took time away, but I can't say it was my decision. Sometimes I should be writing...I've told people who are counting on my writing soon, tomorrow, tomorrow and tommorrow again and couldn't for the life of me just turn on my computer. Also, life fuels art. One needs to live life sometimes to replenish the emotional excitement. So when I am feeling it...I'll do one song after another and before long I've caught up. 2018 was a very rough year for me, but I wrote and recorded about 46 songs and did a few covers. To that though, I gave up going out on the weekend, getting laid, and not doing very much of anything fun, and I wrote some of the best riffs and songs in my life. Now I"m like...fuck, what do I do now...lol. So maybe we can swap places! LOL

  • @1nsomniak said:
    @e121 not sure why you posted that here

    Reaching the limits of where you are, only to realize there is more, can be a spark of sorts to regain a desire to create.

    @MonzoPro said:
    Could be we just got pushed similar videos by the YouTube algorithms

    YouTube for whatever reason always feeds me garbage not worth watching. This video I found just by searching manually, after hearing about Bergrun in an interview.

    Should be noted, there is a chance it isn't real at all, and just a smoke screen put out there to mislead. A remnant of the cold war.

    Ladies and Gentleman We Are Floating in Space. Spiritualized.
    Space Travel is Boring. Modest Mouse.

  • Two rather bleak songs when you really look at them, from the empty decade of the 90s, before people became inundated with all types of horrow show in the aughts, before trying to find purpose in the 10s by fighting for a justice imagined. Meanwhile Jesus Christ is sitting there saying, "What are you doing?"

  • @RedSkyLullaby if you are creating sounds instead of full tracks then you are still exercising your creativity, which is much better than some of the other things you could be doing with your free time. I have to be "in the zone" to create full songs, which doesn't happen very often. In the end I don't think it really matters what we do with our time as long as we are being creative.

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