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.
Comments
Your ‘tweakerness’ is a great luck for us preset players
Fondler?
1.Preset player to check to demo app sounds
2.Knob player , if app passes first stage
I started out as a synthesist, always making my own patches from scratch, and playing the knobs as I go.
Nowadays I’ve come round to the idea that other people might also have made some worthwhile patches, so I try those first, and I’ve found that when songwriting or actually getting stuff done, that’s the way to go, only reverting to patching my own when that approach occasionally falls down and requires a bit of bespoking.
A case in point is that I’ve got an Oberheim Matrix 1000 (well, I’ve got three of them, only one is hooked up at the moment). Since I got them in the 90s the intention was to find a way of programming them easily from a Mac. Now I’ve got no desire to do that (although it really is a superb synth architecture) and I’m re-familiarising myself with all the presets in there (800 built in presets, + 200 ram copies of some of those 800). If I know the presets, that’ll probably do the job better than starting from scratch, while I’m supposed to be putting an actual song together. By the way, the presets on the Matrix 1000, many of them are a compiled ‘best of’, ported over from Matrix 6/12, and to a lesser degree, Xpander, and it’s interesting that in the whole preset list, there’s no mention of Acid or House or Techno at all, it all predates that quite nicely.
I have nothing against Presets. Definitely good starting points. But no matter how hard I try I will always alter presets to suit the track I’m working on.
Yeah, totally agree... but preset fluid comes only after some knob tweaking.
No, that’s a good thing. It means you have your own style.
Preset tweaker