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Video...BOOM 909... Very cool

This is very very good, and of course makes a nice partner to the BOOM 808, Pulse Code have done an excellent job here

Comments

  • edited May 2014

    Glad you liked it, thanks for the video. I bought it because I thought Boom808 was decent and it's all of 99 cents. It isn't for everyone - some people hate that it programs like an actual drum machine, but that's kind of the point of the whole thing.

    Feature-wise, the one think I'd like to see in both Boom! apps is slightly better loop exporting. You can record loops, but they aren't really usable unless you do some editing/trimming with them externally.

    Also, these apps run a little "hot" volume-wise, so it would be nice if they included an output gauge within the app.

    Sounds cool though!

  • edited May 2014

    Well done, Doug, thanks!

    At this price, no brainer...

    Waiting for TR-606 and other stuff.

  • edited May 2014

    @fjcblanco said:

    Well done, Doug, thanks!

    At this price, no brainer...

    Waiting for TR-606 and other stuff.

    Well, I would buy it if they did a 606 (duh, based on my behavior here). I'm still learning about the history of all this stuff, but the 303 (Bass Line) and 606 were meant to be original companions with more of a rock orientation. I guess that makes the 606 more of a response to the Linn LM-1 for more of a traditional "rock drum" sound, though it didn't catch on to the degree that the 808 did with hip hop or the 909 with electronica.

    Then there's there's the 303, which Pulse Code has an iPhone app for, but hasn't touched since 2010:

    https://itunes.apple.com/us/app/digital-bass-line-db-303/id383547299?mt=8

    That app doesn't even have a .wav export feature, so no dice. They do seem to kind of cannibalize or remake their old apps into newer versions. There really isn't, in my opinion, a good programmable "bass guitar" machine that actually sounds like finger or picked bass. The TB-303 does what it does, but is a different kind of sound.

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