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.

Todays New App Sales..UPDATED Sunday 30 th August, iMini, iSEM, iPhrophet added

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Comments

  • @AndyX said:
    For the August SOTM, I'm thinking of laying out a backing track in SessionBand and overlaying / mixing that with stuff coming out of something like Gestrument. Right now playing with Rock genre on both. Of course, that could end in a disaster.

    More than four weeks until deadline day. Plenty of time for a symphony. Get to it!

  • Oohh, the crushing weight of responsibility :)

  • I was going to buy the Acoustic guitar 2 then suddenly it changed from buy to get! I said Wow!!!! Tapped right away and it didn't charge me! Wow! Thanks SessionBand!
    So next I went to the STR and clicked on the link for Blues Session Band and got a whole bundle for $6
    Amazing!!!!

    Was listening to the acoustic 1 and there is quality recordings in there.

    What I need is an app that can do audio timestretching. I just asked in the MTS thread but its pretty expensive at the mo.

    Any ideas?

  • edited July 2015

    Beat Time! is another app I have that does time stretch, pitch detection and shift, and some other nice stuff, at $5. I don't use it for time stretch however because, as far as I can tell, you need to specify a percentage of the original tempo, at integer numbers only. I prefer to work more precisely in beats, which I can do in MTS.

    I'm pretty certain that there are other threads dedicated to time stretch in the forum; you might find some useful information there as well.

  • @High5denied I can't exactly say cause I'm not into metal to know about the difference between those bands!

  • @necrome said:
    High5denied I can't exactly say cause I'm not into metal to know about the difference between those bands!

    ok fair enough. But, really everyone should be into metal. lol.......

  • Man my hard disk is super full now.
    No room left.

  • Have to say that while I have deleted all Session Band apps (too much space! not as good (to me) as Tin Pan!) this thread led me to pulling up Jazz 1 last night because I have a film guy in from LA (look at me) and he made a 60 second Cinematic of the house here in Maine (weird to see a good amateur app in the hands of a real professional).

    While he flew around in FinaCutPro he demanded a slinky slow soundtrack. Session band (via FLUX and EchoPad) sufficed in about three minutes....the sax samples are nice as well, but are far too recognizable for use more than the once (if that) but the piano, bass and drums are very usable.....

  • edited July 2015

    the sax samples are nice as well, but are far too recognizable for use more than the once (if that)

    Yep, that's a potential problem with SB - the tracks sound good but if you give them the spotlight, I think some of the instruments quickly become recognizable. I'm thinking about exporting each separate instrument in its own audio track, and then running some of them through different effects, to mitigate this. For example, the guitar goes thru ToneStack, or something like that.

    Happy that you found use for your SB too. I also like TPR's interface a lot. A dream backing track app for me would be SB's sounds in TPR's interface!

  • edited July 2015

    I've taken Jazz drum and double bass loops from SB and then chopped them around in Abu Dhabi. Worked pretty nicely.

  • Chopping up is always interesting. I'm trying some of this in Samplr too.

  • edited July 2015

    @AndyX said:
    Chopping up is always interesting. I'm trying some of this in Samplr too.

    Yup. Good approach. Team @Supadom's Multi-Tasking Performance Art videos have made me think that a) I need to whip Samplr some, but also b) that the accidents/energy of live recording needs to be used/exploited more (by me).....

  • @JohnnyGoodyear said:
    Yup. Good approach. Team Supadom's Multi-Tasking Performance Art videos have made me think that a) I need to whip Samplr some, but also b) that the accidents/energy of live recording needs to be used/exploited more (by me).....

    Between @Supadom and the recent surge of interest in DrumJam we could end up with a very lively August SOTMC.

  • @JohnnyGoodyear Samplr and Loopy sync almost seemlessly. Since, from what I understand, your stuff is pretty loopy you could do worse than adopting these two orphans and spending some quality solitary time with them. If I were to choose one app out there it would be Samplr without a second thought.

  • I own all and deleted them long ago for space. More power to those who can work them creatively. Loops are good but never felt like I was creating anything.

  • Yonac just tweeted that Steel Guitar and miniSynth 2 are both FREE for a limited time!

  • SessionBand have gone up to 8.99, they weren't on sale long

  • Am I missing something, or is there no way to save anything with Tin Pan Rhythm, @JohnnyGoodyear?

  • @thus Not yet, they're promising.

  • Thnks!
    I kind of want it to do that to match project tempo.

  • In that case try Hokusai or, I believe, Sector.

    Actually Loopy will do it accurately to the project tempo.

    BM2 also does time stretching and pitch shifting.

  • Latest Additions include AmenBreak Generator for FREE, and ToneStack is back on and Steel Guitar is still free
    http://thesoundtestroom.com/app-sales/

  • @Matt_Fletcher_2000 said:
    In that case try Hokusai or, I believe, Sector.

    Actually Loopy will do it accurately to the project tempo.

    BM2 also does time stretching and pitch shifting.

    Twisted wave is a secret weapon in this department also. Use this app A LOT.

  • @JohnnyGoodyear said:
    Twisted wave is a secret weapon in this department also. Use this app A LOT.

    Was wondering if Twisted wave can also add markers and save the slices into separate files? The app store says it supports CAF files,but does it only read caf files or can you also create new caf files with Twisted wave?

    Thanks.

  • @Proto

    Yes on CAF. You can choose between Wave, AIFF/AIFC, CAF, AAC, Apple Lossless, FLAC and MP3, and select bit rate/bit depth/compression as applicable etc for many of this options.

    They've just added markers, but I haven't used them yet. You can certainly export/save selected slices into separate files. Have to say that the thing I like THE MOST about Twisted Wave (in other words what I turn to it for the most) is minute editing of any sample, you can get in down to the last millisecond and this makes for extremely precise editing. It does lots of other clever things, but if AudioShare could edit samples as brilliantly I might not open TW, but it doesn't and I do.

    Def. one of those programs you wonder about beforehand, but once used you'd have to pry it from my cold dead hand etc. to get it off my ipad now....

  • Wow, 1st August already, anyway some interesting ones added today including the excellent SynthQ
    http://thesoundtestroom.com/app-sales/

  • Thanks for the info. I also found the manual online and im amazed how many files and options this audio editor supports. Im wondering if i can create my own CAF files to use with Beathawk. I havent purchased Beathawk yet, but if this works im gonna buy both.

  • @Proto Do indulge my idiot ignorant self: What feature, benefit, advantage does one get from CAF?

  • @JohnnyGoodyear said:
    Proto Do indulge my idiot ignorant self: What feature, benefit, advantage does one get from CAF?

    Caf files can contain more info compared to a wav or aiff file. It can store markers and other info and you dont have to chop all the slices into separated files. As far as i know it does the same as the Steinberg rex files.I never worked with Caf files myself but this is what i understood.

    Here is the full description pasted.

    Core Audio Format is designed to overcome limitations of older digital audio formats, including AIFF and WAV. Just like the QuickTime .mov container, a .caf container can contain many different audio formats, metadata tracks, and much more data. Not limited to a 4 GB file size like older digital audio formats, a single .caf file can theoretically save hundreds of years of recorded audio due to its use of 64-bit file offsets.[2]

  • @Proto said:
    Core Audio Format is designed to overcome limitations of older digital audio formats, including AIFF and WAV. Just like the QuickTime .mov container, a .caf container can contain many different audio formats, metadata tracks, and much more data. Not limited to a 4 GB file size like older digital audio formats, a single .caf file can theoretically save hundreds of years of recorded audio due to its use of 64-bit file offsets.[2]

    Thanks. Interesting. It feels like I have a few hundred years of recorded rubbish around here, this might be perfect... :)

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