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Keytar live rig built with iOS Audiobus

Hello all. For the past month I’ve been an ardent lurker as I tried to build something new for a live music performance. I had a few songs that needed a variety of key sounds, but didn’t want to stand behind a full-size keyboard and sing. I also couldn’t justify the minimum $250 cost for a pro-am level keytar, and where’s the fun in just jumping to the answer out of the box? Here’s what I ended up using:

Rock Band 3 keytar: I bought the Wii version for $15. It’s a two-octave keypad with MIDI out and battery power, along with a touch pad for pitch and mod. Once I sorted how to connect it, it was the most trouble free part of my setup.

iPad Air: I did already own a newer iPad Air, and wouldn’t have really tried this with something too much older. Also, my particular performance didn’t lend itself to lugging a laptop onstage.

IRig MIDI 2: Other users had suggested a basic MIDI cable connected to the iPad would work, but I could never get the keytar to sync properly with just a cable. This box kept things sorted properly.

Audiobus 3: I built my system around Audiobus 3, which worked well as long as the apps were AU3 compatible. I saw a few too many crashes with non-updated apps to ever feel at ease using them on stage.

BeatHawk: After hours of exploring, most of my keysounds ended up coming from BeatHawk. It can be challenging to figure out whether a pack has a key extension rather than just loops, but between the organ and mellotron packs I found what I needed.

Ravenscroft275: Yep, it’s the best piano sound, and AU3 compatible. I did have to be careful how I loaded it, as it’s stability wasn’t rock-solid with everything else running.

Tonality: In a couple of songs, I wanted to just play chords with a single key. Tonality was the best answer I found and worked very well.

Midi Tools: I somewhat foolishly decided that in order to play multiple sounds in the same song, I would split my keyboard and use chords on one side. Getting the split to work properly was the hardest part; I nearly gave up at a few points because the approaches I tried to build were so unstable. Once I built the split in Midi Tools, everything was finally stable enough that I didn’t have to worry about hard restarting an iPad on stage.

All told, this system did what I needed it to do with one hiccup I was able to correct on stage. This forum was a real help.

Comments

  • Keytar's live rigs are my field... thanks for sharing! <3

    Good job!

  • a video would be great :)

  • Did you manage to get the mod strip to work on the keytar? Mines hanging on the wall

  • Yes, it works for both tone and pitch in BeatHawk. I set BH to accept only MIDI from AU3; the slider changed tone on its own and pitch when the button is pushed. There are a couple of issues: the direction is reversed from what it should be, and somehow in setup I managed to shift the pitch accidentally.

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