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.

Game Changiest iOS App of All Time

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Comments

  • edited April 11

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  • edited April 11

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  • edited April 12

    It feels like everyone has a mini recording studio in their pocket now. Smartphones democratized music making in a way nothing else has. Imagine telling your garage band heroes in the 80s they could record themselves going viral for free!

    Curious though, how many folks here are using these mobile tools to create music they release professionally? The quality can be amazing nowadays, but there's something to be said for the polish and precision of a traditional studio setup. Maybe it's a spectrum, with mobile tools perfect for initial ideas and demos. What do you all think?

    (P.S. Just for fun, anyone here dabble in those cryptocurrency music platforms? Intriguing concept, but feels a little like the Wild West out there. Reviews like [https://www.crypto-casinos.com/reviews/] can be helpful, but proceed with caution! )

  • @Calandwe said:
    Imagine telling your garage band heroes in the 80s they could record themselves going viral for free!

    ... and that the music industry would be destroyed, not by illegal piracy but by legal streaming services!

  • Before there was Audiobus, before there was GarageBand 🎸 there was

    Xewton’s Music Studio running on an iPhone 3GS how game changy was that!

  • @BiancaNeve said:
    Before there was Audiobus, before there was GarageBand 🎸 there was

    Xewton’s Music Studio running on an iPhone 3GS how game changy was that!

    ...and it looks so 80s with the faux 3d and gradients and huge fonts 😍

  • @wim said:
    @Michael and Audiobus changied my game from having completely given up making music to making more music than I had all my life. (By making music, I mean beyond just noodling on my guitar)

    After a few years of fun and discovery with Windows DAWs. I reached a point that the second I would sit down at the PC every ounce of creativity would instantly evaporate. I chalk it up to spending 10 hours or more a day supporting PC computing. But for whatever reason, music making was dead for me.

    I stumbled across an ZDNet article where Audiobus and the Audiobus forum was mentioned. I checked it out. I could't believe how inexpensive the apps I read about were. I finagled a way to get my hands on an iPad. I found that the creative paralysis was completely gone when working with the iPad rather than at the desktop!

    And here I am still, happily creating every day, now with Loopy Pro opening up new doors, improving my chops, and freeing me from obsessing over tweaking midi tracks to perfection rather than flowing with the creative process.

    I still occasionally visit the AudioBus forum too. 😉

    This sounds a lot like my case. I recently bought a PC for the purposes of transporting files to and from my OP-1 Field. I tried FL Studio, which was my main (and only) DAW (which I could afford), and all my creative juices froze up. I think this is the first time I ever experienced "stage fright" (and I've performed piano in front of live audiences since I was 10). 😂 But it's all good. I do the majority of my music creation on my iPhone (and oftentimes in FLSM when it's not in Koala), and a quick mastering on my iPad in Logic.


    @BiancaNeve said:
    Before there was Audiobus, before there was GarageBand 🎸 there was

    Xewton’s Music Studio running on an iPhone 3GS how game changy was that!

    Here comes a huge nostalgia hit.

    Who also remembers the iRig Mic? ;) Also who remembers this bop which this dude created in Music Studio? (Wish it was released as a single, but for the time it sounded outdated. Now the song would probably be a top hit on Spinnin with replacing some drums. 😂 )

  • @SevenSystems said:

    @BiancaNeve said:
    Before there was Audiobus, before there was GarageBand 🎸 there was

    Xewton’s Music Studio running on an iPhone 3GS how game changy was that!

    ...and it looks so 80s with the faux 3d and gradients and huge fonts 😍

    Yeah, but the large fonts made it useable on the tiny screen :smile:

  • edited April 11

    For me there were 3 major game changers - Nanostudio 1, then BeatMaker 2 and then Nanostudio 2

  • BeatMaker 2 was awesome.

    When I got that app I realized that my life had changed, music making became much more accessible… lol, that was an iPad 2. I’m on an 11” iPad Pro 2020 now and really looking forward to the new models coming out in May (hopefully, please).

  • Drambo IS the game changer of iOS. I barely use it but I know what it is and if I could use it to full potential I would be on another level. iOS , iPadOS , macOS ; it’s the only “app” installed on anything I can install it on just in case. If it could do audio more than its limited bit it would be best daw on macOS

  • I think it’s that legendary game-changer GOAT app from that genius developer.

  • Drambo is up there for me. As a guitar player, GeoShred has been pretty fabulous as well. It does a good job at getting that feel once I got adjusted to it

  • @Fingolfinzz said:
    Drambo is up there for me. As a guitar player, GeoShred has been pretty fabulous as well. It does a good job at getting that feel once I got adjusted to it

    Oh that’s what it does? So do you hold your tablet like in your lap and finger it as if it were a fretboard ?

    (And do you play 7 or 8 string ?)

  • Logic pro of course... I'm joking, it has to be audiobus, but I came here in 2020 so I'm a newbie

  • @anickt said:

    Now that takes me back. :) That was released before ReBirth. Now we have Pure Acid to take the place of those apps, but technoBox was released during the "mysterious" and early days of iOS music. :)

  • Audiobus for the win! I actually purchased audiobus just about a year before the release of AUM
    I’m a newb compared to a lot of you.
    I started out with loopyHD as my first way to sketch and had a blast making loops there with IAA.

  • Biggest noob here, really , seriously and I missed audio bus and aum
    I still found ios thanks to dRambo

  • edited April 12

    Is this a personal game changer or an industry type of game changer?

    Update. Thought this was a new thread, please disregard, lol.

  • I thought it changed the way sequencing was done , particular with hardware too. In addition to running midi almost like a DAW even with the recording of samples and what not . So for me it’s personal game changer but no I meant it’s an iOS industry game changer because it does what almost all the other apps do but more. It’s hard to say it or put it into words but if you know how to use dRambo you might not even want to use any other apps on iOS it’s that incredible and multifaceted. It’s a toolbox with countless permutations . Yes it’s midi but it is somewhat audio
    I said this before if beep street just put in rudimentary audio they would have the best daw in macOS universal

    Industry changer

  • For me it was BlocsWave.

    It had a a massive roll in kickstarting me back into writing music. Nothing else has so little friction — it loads instantly and I can be jamming within seconds. This encouraged me to make loops with all the other fun iOS apps to feed it. And from there I was writing songs again.

    Most of the other apps where just similar ways to do things I could already do on desktop. Having BlocsWave in my pocket was the real difference.

    And it was BlocsWave not say a pocket DAW as BlocsWave has almost zero friction to starting a track. I was never going to use, say, BeatMaker 2 when I had a couple of minute spare as it took that long to get started.

    So yeah. easy. BlocsWave.

  • @busker said:
    Without Audiobus we also wouldn't have this forum, which continues to be the main hub for the iOS music community even after all these years.

    I totally agree. Best forum ever.

  • For it's Drambo as well. Always wanted a Elektron Octatrack, but as an hobbyist where music is a big one but not the only passion I spend money on I could never justify buying one, and I also don't want to turn my living space into a mancave full of hardware. Drambo, AUM, Koala etc. allow me to make music in a more interactive way, which is a welcome contrast to the keyboard and mouse workflow.

  • Although Thumbjam possible was the greatest gamechanger back in 2009-2010, I think we often forget Auria Audio Workstation - Auria showed all of a sudden what was possible to do on an iPad back in 2012…

    Pretty interesting that Auria Pro has several core functionality onboard that Cubasis v3 still misses, example Busses…

  • edited April 12

    Nanostudio 2 because of how easy it is to make something cool with it.

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