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.

Ranking Iceworks/Icegear synths

2»

Comments

  • @HotStrange said:

    @Fear2Stop said:

    @HotStrange said:

    @Fear2Stop said:

    @HotStrange said:

    @Fear2Stop said:

    @HotStrange said:

    @Fear2Stop said:

    @HotStrange said:
    I dont have Nambu yet, it’s the only one of theirs I don’t have. But I see nothing but praise for it so I’d say it’s a safe bet. It’s on my list for sure. Oh! I also don’t have Lorentz but it seems great.

    For the ones I do have, Kronecker is my favorite. Truly a unique instrument capable of some really really cool sounds. Laplace is the king of physical modeling on iOS, imo. And Lagrange is just a powerhouse. The other 2 are far more specialized but each have their place. Mersenne can be very beautiful sounding.

    LaPlace was the only one I’m still not impressed with via YouTube, but after hearing how much better Redshrike and LaGrange sounded in “real life” I’m not gonna let that color my decision!

    I am amazed at how flexible these have been, and Redshrike surprised me…didn’t think it would be possible to make a Vangelis type sound but I already did lol

    Oh yeah they’re super flexible. Lagrange is basically what? 6-8 synths in one? LaPlace can definitely do way more than it appears but it does sorta still stay in its own zone. Definitely worth having though. Especially if you like Karplus Strong and physical modeling.

    Actually learning about different kinds of synthesis I’ve never really heard of before thanks to LaGrange, and it and Redshrike taught me about different kinds of noise I’d never heard of before (blue noise, for instance).

    Royalties should hit tomorrow so I’m getting Nambu then. I’m blown away by how great it sounds; it literally sounds like hardware. And that’s with YouTube compression! One of my bandmates and I were talking about it and he said it sounds like thousands of dollars worth of gear …$17.99 actually feels like a steal which is incredible considering I’ve only once paid more than $14.99 for an app (Synclavier Go) which is in fact the ONLY reason I don’t have any of the moogs yet !

    Synclavier Go is a great one to splurge on though! I haven’t wrapped my head around all the editing so I usually just tweak presets but it sounds great.

    Nambu is next on my “big purchase” list I think. It’s between that and Twin3.

    I love the Moog apps too, but if I had to chose one it’d be Animoog without a doubt. They usually have 1-2 huge sales a year so if you can hold out til may, I would. That’s Bobs bday (which I think we talked about previously). You may be able to snatch all 3 for the price of one.

    That’s the plan! Can’t wait til May!

    Loving Nambu so far but did notice two things 1) it takes up a lot of cpu and has crashed a few times in GarageBand, and 2) oddly the screen resolution is much better as an AU in GB than in standalone!

    Glad you’re enjoying it but bummer about the crashing. Luckily the dev generally tackles all these problems. Hopefully I’ll have it in the next couple weeks or so.

    I honestly think it’s more of a GarageBand issue than with Nambu itself . I notice if I start a song with nambu and add a whole bunch of stuff it’s fine, but not the other way around

    I’m curious since you mostly work on GB. Are you playing everything by hand since it doesn’t support AU midi, or are you using something else?

    Yup…everything is done by hand using the on screen keyboard … basically, I’ll set it to either 8 or (if I’m feeling especially froggy that day ) 16 measures, say a quick prayer , hit record and after the count in, I play the end of that section. Then I’ll overdub another part , or add drums or bass. Besides the third party synths, I’ll use the touch instruments in GB like the bass guitar or drums . When I’m done , I’ll export the individual wavs by soloing each one and emailing them to myself. Then I’ll send it to whomever else in the band that wants to overdub like a real bass or guitar or something. I’ll mix and master on my laptop . Sometimes it’ll be the other way around ! I can’t read music and my music theory knowledge is pretty basic , but I do everything by ear . Sometimes my daughter will have a chord sheet for her stuff ;”(her music theory knowledge is also limited but she’s been playing keyboards since she was 7 ) and she can transcribe enough for me to be able to put it in the chord editor in GarageBand, and then cut/paste whatever I record into what ever synth she chooses (like for instance…her solo album was done mostly in Synclavier and Omega, with a little help from Mood and IVCS3).

    Running joke in my house is how I can create a patch in IVCS3 but can’t read all but the most basic sheet music 😂

  • I wonder if it’s worth to get Lorentz if I already got Lagrange. Lorentz is simpler by design but has the resonator.

  • @Slush said:
    I wonder if it’s worth to get Lorentz if I already got Lagrange. Lorentz is simpler by design but has the resonator.

    I’d think so. They all have their own distinct sound… Lorentz seems like it could sound more aggressive and angry then Lagrange seems to be able to.

  • @Fear2Stop said:

    @Slush said:
    I wonder if it’s worth to get Lorentz if I already got Lagrange. Lorentz is simpler by design but has the resonator.

    I’d think so. They all have their own distinct sound… Lorentz seems like it could sound more aggressive and angry then Lagrange seems to be able to.

    and like all if dude’s stuff given the capabilities, accessibility and elegance of the GUI is outstanding

  • @Fear2Stop said:

    @HotStrange said:

    @Fear2Stop said:

    @HotStrange said:

    @Fear2Stop said:

    @HotStrange said:

    @Fear2Stop said:

    @HotStrange said:

    @Fear2Stop said:

    @HotStrange said:
    I dont have Nambu yet, it’s the only one of theirs I don’t have. But I see nothing but praise for it so I’d say it’s a safe bet. It’s on my list for sure. Oh! I also don’t have Lorentz but it seems great.

    For the ones I do have, Kronecker is my favorite. Truly a unique instrument capable of some really really cool sounds. Laplace is the king of physical modeling on iOS, imo. And Lagrange is just a powerhouse. The other 2 are far more specialized but each have their place. Mersenne can be very beautiful sounding.

    LaPlace was the only one I’m still not impressed with via YouTube, but after hearing how much better Redshrike and LaGrange sounded in “real life” I’m not gonna let that color my decision!

    I am amazed at how flexible these have been, and Redshrike surprised me…didn’t think it would be possible to make a Vangelis type sound but I already did lol

    Oh yeah they’re super flexible. Lagrange is basically what? 6-8 synths in one? LaPlace can definitely do way more than it appears but it does sorta still stay in its own zone. Definitely worth having though. Especially if you like Karplus Strong and physical modeling.

    Actually learning about different kinds of synthesis I’ve never really heard of before thanks to LaGrange, and it and Redshrike taught me about different kinds of noise I’d never heard of before (blue noise, for instance).

    Royalties should hit tomorrow so I’m getting Nambu then. I’m blown away by how great it sounds; it literally sounds like hardware. And that’s with YouTube compression! One of my bandmates and I were talking about it and he said it sounds like thousands of dollars worth of gear …$17.99 actually feels like a steal which is incredible considering I’ve only once paid more than $14.99 for an app (Synclavier Go) which is in fact the ONLY reason I don’t have any of the moogs yet !

    Synclavier Go is a great one to splurge on though! I haven’t wrapped my head around all the editing so I usually just tweak presets but it sounds great.

    Nambu is next on my “big purchase” list I think. It’s between that and Twin3.

    I love the Moog apps too, but if I had to chose one it’d be Animoog without a doubt. They usually have 1-2 huge sales a year so if you can hold out til may, I would. That’s Bobs bday (which I think we talked about previously). You may be able to snatch all 3 for the price of one.

    That’s the plan! Can’t wait til May!

    Loving Nambu so far but did notice two things 1) it takes up a lot of cpu and has crashed a few times in GarageBand, and 2) oddly the screen resolution is much better as an AU in GB than in standalone!

    Glad you’re enjoying it but bummer about the crashing. Luckily the dev generally tackles all these problems. Hopefully I’ll have it in the next couple weeks or so.

    I honestly think it’s more of a GarageBand issue than with Nambu itself . I notice if I start a song with nambu and add a whole bunch of stuff it’s fine, but not the other way around

    I’m curious since you mostly work on GB. Are you playing everything by hand since it doesn’t support AU midi, or are you using something else?

    Yup…everything is done by hand using the on screen keyboard … basically, I’ll set it to either 8 or (if I’m feeling especially froggy that day ) 16 measures, say a quick prayer , hit record and after the count in, I play the end of that section. Then I’ll overdub another part , or add drums or bass. Besides the third party synths, I’ll use the touch instruments in GB like the bass guitar or drums . When I’m done , I’ll export the individual wavs by soloing each one and emailing them to myself. Then I’ll send it to whomever else in the band that wants to overdub like a real bass or guitar or something. I’ll mix and master on my laptop . Sometimes it’ll be the other way around ! I can’t read music and my music theory knowledge is pretty basic , but I do everything by ear . Sometimes my daughter will have a chord sheet for her stuff ;”(her music theory knowledge is also limited but she’s been playing keyboards since she was 7 ) and she can transcribe enough for me to be able to put it in the chord editor in GarageBand, and then cut/paste whatever I record into what ever synth she chooses (like for instance…her solo album was done mostly in Synclavier and Omega, with a little help from Mood and IVCS3).

    Running joke in my house is how I can create a patch in IVCS3 but can’t read all but the most basic sheet music 😂

    I feel that. I can’t read music at all. I just know how to play it 😂

    I like working that way occasionally as well. Each workflow inspires me in a different way. I do everything on my iPad though. I haven’t had a laptop in probably 3-4 years. I rarely ever feel hindered though. At least for what I’m doing.

    Also if you’re interested there are some cool theory apps like Progression or Scaler. They wouldn’t do much good in GarageBand due to no midi. But it’s great for coming up with chord progressions and seeing them visually. Could be useful? Scaler has a free version that works great.

  • Just got Kroenecker today and wow it is amazing.. two more to go (Mersenne and LaPlace)

  • Now that I have all of them I gotta laugh at my initial hesitance on ANY of these . Im amazed at how versatile and useful all of these are. These are a sound designer’s dream synths .

    And wow I SERIOUSLY underrated LaPlace lol

  • @Fear2Stop said:
    Just got Kroenecker today and wow it is amazing.. two more to go (Mersenne and LaPlace)

    Kroenecker is my favorite of theirs (well besides Nambu now). It’s beautiful. LaPlace and Mersenne are amazing as well. Welcome to the club! Haha.

Sign In or Register to comment.