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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.

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What are you reading? Is it not bad?

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Comments

  • Now I’m about halfway through “The Road to Little Dribbling,” Bill Bryson’s amusing and informative account of a trip he took from the Southernmost part of England to the northernmost point in Scotland.

    I love Bill Bryson.

  • I’m reading Orwell’s Animal Farm and Nineteen Eighty Four, still disturbing glimpses of the future or present time, seems a few people in high places are using them as ‘how-to’ manuals.

  • Now I'm reading Atomic Habits by James Clear.

  • @rottencat said:
    I just finished “Papyrus: The Invention of Books in the Ancient World” by Irene Vallejo.

    This is an excellent and fascinating survey of the history of the written word. Highly recommended.

    Sounds awesome ima audio book it

  • How to Write Guitar Riffs by Rikky Rooksby

    This one is great because on top of some general knowledge and good info it goes into specifics of hundred or so different famous songs and what makes them work so well.

  • @Poppadocrock said:
    How to Write Guitar Riffs by Rikky Rooksby

    This one is great because on top of some general knowledge and good info it goes into specifics of hundred or so different famous songs and what makes them work so well.

    Sounds like a good read. The theory behind what makes riffs interesting is really interesting, as sometimes the best-known riffs aren’t based on what you SHOULD do but instead based on what conventional wisdom tells you that you SHOULDN’T do.

  • @michael_m said:

    @Poppadocrock said:
    How to Write Guitar Riffs by Rikky Rooksby

    This one is great because on top of some general knowledge and good info it goes into specifics of hundred or so different famous songs and what makes them work so well.

    Sounds like a good read. The theory behind what makes riffs interesting is really interesting, as sometimes the best-known riffs aren’t based on what you SHOULD do but instead based on what conventional wisdom tells you that you SHOULDN’T do.

    Very true.

  • Just finished listening to Adrian Goldsworthy’s “The Fall Of Carthage”. I appreciated getting a more “zoomed in” view of Rome in this period as well as the Punic Wars. It had just the right amount of military detail without getting into the weeds, which made it absorbing for me.

    I might revisit his “Pax Romana” book which was kind of a slog at the time for me.

    Right now I need to finish the western “A Man. Allen Trent” by Louis L’amour. I’m into Eurowestern films and never quite got into the classic older American westerns (with a few exceptions). I’m finding that the books (audiobooks in my case) are a lot more entertaining.

  • Just finished “lost in the garden” by Adam S. Leslie. It’s a very psychedelic sort of apocalyptic folk horror. It’s kind of like Dhalgren by Samuel Delaney, but set in the home counties rather than the mid-west of the US. Recommended to fans of Jeff Noon ( if there are any here).

    https://deadinkbooks.com/product/lost-in-the-garden/

  • Im Reading Roving Darkness and the Druids Destiny by Autumn Wolff
    Really amazing urban fantasy with Celtic mythology mixed in

  • I'm reading Genghis Khan and the Making of the Modern World. It's not bad. Not bad at all.

  • In anticipation of his new book ‘Absolution” , I am re-reading Jeff VanderMeer’s Southern Reach trilogy. Which will be a fourth instalment from this series out later this month.

  • The Illustrated Golden Bough by James George Frazer, General Editor Mary Douglas, Abridged and Illustrated by Sabine MacCormack
    The Wasp Factory by Iain Banks

  • Gravity’s Rainbow .. jury’s still out .

  • Been on a history binge. Listening to an audiobook on the 1930s U.S. Listened to the same author’s book on the 1920s. Since it was written not long after each decade, it has an interesting immediacy to it.

    The books are called “Only Yesterday” and “Since Yesterday “.

  • Alien Clay by Adrian Tchaikovsky, just a lovely blend of exobiology and revolutionary politics…

  • Basil’s War, Front Sight: Three Swagger Novellas by Stephen Hunter
    V., The Crying of Lot 49, Gravity’s Rainbow by Thomas Pynchon
    etc.

  • @cramdog said:
    Basil’s War, Front Sight: Three Swagger Novellas by Stephen Hunter
    V., The Crying of Lot 49, Gravity’s Rainbow by Thomas Pynchon
    etc.

    Gravity’s Rainbow seems like Pynchon reaction to James Joyce.
    The Crying of Lot 49 is a more reasonable investment of your time.

    I was good for about 10% of GR and probably read the other but can’t recall
    anything about it.

    How are you enjoying either.

    I’m re-reading Mel Torme’s biography of Buddy Rich… a hero of mine as the greatest
    live performer of all time. I was able to see him several years in a row at Disneyland
    siring on the ballroom floor 10 feet away from his bass drum. Words cannot describe those
    shows in a way that would mean anything unless you loved Big Band Jazz like it did growing up.

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