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.
Loopy Pro: FIRST LOOK
This discussion has been closed.
Comments
This artist is new to me. Holy smokes
Zoe Keating uses Ableton in live performance in pretty much this fashion: she’s listening to a click, and the session triggers recording and subsequent loop playback in accordance with her arrangement of the particular piece.
For non-"typical" live looping performers, I’ll (again!) plug Andre LaFosse, who makes full use of the EDP’s ability to multiply a loop’s length while you add another layer on top, insert or replace audio in the middle of a loop, and chop the current loop down to a smaller (sometimes only a few tens of milliseconds) loop to use as a new base. Andre’s loop lengths and textures constantly ebb and flow in performance, and like a DJ, he segues from piece to piece rather than stopping to build a new piece again from an empty loop. Highly recommended.
Thanks for the suggestions, @celtic_elk. I mentioned the other night that Loopy Pro has caused me to do a creative pause. I think I said something like “I’m not sure I’m making the music I want to make” which came out perhaps sounding like LP could stifle creativity. It’s actually just the opposite. But because I’ve been thinking in a binary way about live looping OR MIDI looping using LK or Helium, I have had to pause with LP to think about the in between scenario where I “pre-compose “ sections but live loop the arrangements. Tantalizing!
She’s fantastic.
I can recommend listening to Hide and Seek on headphones. Also, see if you can spot the sample 😉
Thanks; I learned some new things. Much appreciated.
I first encountered looping from a slightly earlier source:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/gormanghast/6920010771/
(Referenced from this article: https://www.paulgormanis.com/?p=4844 )
As most of us Loopers know, it’s all about getting the timing right
They did some great stuff together. I usually play the song “Discreet Music” (from the Eno album of the same name) when I go to bed. Very loopy.
Eno’s tape loop system became the original Frippertronics. That’s all being re-discovered today.
I use Harry Gohs (Virsyn) Tap Delay to get a similar result.
I recently saw someone claim that Frippertronics was "the first" something or other. Is there any truth to this? I thought they were doing tape delay looping in San Francisco twenty years before anyone heard of Frippertronics. My impression is that Fripp's only contribution was naming it after himself.
Check out this record from 1968, for example:
That accords with my impression. Riley and others were clearly doing things with tape loops and Frippertronics-style delay systems a good decade before Eno invited Fripp to see his setup. A more extensive history post (not mine): http://www.livelooping.org/history_concepts/theory/the-birth-of-loop/
Definitely was being done before Fripp/Eno. I think they just raised awareness during the time they were using it. There was no internet as we know it now so information about such a thing was scarce.
It wasn't common knowledge, but anyone taking an experimental music class in college would have known about by the mid-70s easily. It's in that classic textbook of the era (whose title and author I've forgotten).
Maybe it was the live, re-recording aspect that was new with Fripp?
Terry Riley was already doing that in performance in the late ‘60s. If Fripp and Eno were the first anything in that regard, they were probably the first musicians with substantial popular visibility (via the prog-rock scene) to use that setup, which is maybe why "Frippertronics" stuck in the popular imagination and Riley’s "Time-Lag Accumulator" didn’t. 😄
I’llm tell you one thing—those names are terrible. If someone had coined the term “looping” back in the day, they would have all the credit now.
Thank you. Me too!
Are the two similar?
Beta is going great. There were a few folks complaining about the chatter about the beta so I stopped posting here to be respectful to their concerns.
That’s great - it wasn’t me but I would fully back the sentiment behind it. I couldn’t stand to see endless chatter about it all - keep all the talk, if’s, but’s, maybes, hmmm, how about this?, man this is great, everyone will love 💕 it, I’ve found a bug.. but its only tiny, to yourselves until it’s released…. if that’s ok. I’m happy not to see it all, so if you can keep it to yourselves.. that would get my vote. Keep up the good work though! Your feedback is important.
And don’t forget - if it gets released with bugs that you didn’t spot - it’s down to you. Maybe you are punching above your weight and you had not truly earned this privileged position? - really should have spotted them - don’t be a slacker. Your identities are already known. The world needs your dedication at this difficult time…. don’t you be the one that didn’t see it. We don’t want to hear about ‘oooooohh I didn’t even think to try that!’. Now get to it.. and earn your corn!
I'll be the voice of dissent. Obviously adhere to all, if there are any, NDA restrictions, but I love seeing what people are trying and how Loopy Pro is shaping up. It's also neat to see the workings of the good beta testers and how they come up with test scenarios and use cases.
+1
Damn, you beat me to it. 👏🏻 So I now have to raise you her "musical gloves" instrument:
And as a bonus, here she comes doing Hide and Seek with the gloves
Science fiction. 😳 The general rule seems to be that she does everything way before you do and does it way better than you ever will 🤷
Maybe we can find middle ground and post videos and hype type stuff but keep the beta chatter to slack (which is basically what happened so no big deal). Someone asked about the retrospective looping earlier so maybe we can knock out a video on that.
Holy shit! Very cool
There was a similar debate earlier this year on the 2021 iOS App Sales and Discussion thread. Ultimately the majority decided they liked the sometimes-excessive chatter. There was an attempt to cross-post to an announcements-only thread, but that died off.
I’m in favor of more chatter around Loopy Pro beta testing. It feels like there was more chatter before the beta dropped than there is now, and I miss that. I think many of us like to live vicariously through the experiences of the testers.
OK, there will be following videos that show Loopy’s depth but I attempt in this video to address the use case that came up a few pages back around the beginner looper. I’ve been looping for a while so I have a pretty good handle on it but the feature to capture the first loop will certainly help a beginner as shown in this video (which is a waltz to show how the algo works, as well).
This is just my acoustic plugged directly into an audio interface and routed into Loopy Pro. Note that I could have put the Drambo pitch shifter on the input to hear the bass effect on the second loop but i was lazy and just assigned the effect to the blue color group. At least it’ll give some ideas for how flexible the fx routing is and how you could do some gee whizzz live looping. I do have brusfri loaded on the input.
Finally, the second and third loops use the retrospective looper. I played until i heard what i liked and then swiped down on the loop. This is a neat trick i learned from the beta test: you can set a gesture for the retro looper so that you can mix/match go forward looping (as usual, with a tap) with retro looping (any gesture you select). You can set retro looping as a default in the settings which gives you one added benefit: you can see the loop wave form in the doughnut which gives you a visual representation of the retro looping process. Anyhoo, lots of options for beginner and expert loopers.
Pfft I did this in 1990 with a MIDI rigged NES Power Glove! I was also 5 at the time.
It’s a mix of both in this case but you could do either. It’s really genius how Michael thought of the color FX groups once you get the hang of it.
Nice demo!
Any reason why you overdubbed on the first loop rather than doing a new donut each time? (I think that’s what you did?)
I’m really new to how this looping thing works so it’s great to see other people’s workflow.
Actually, i didn’t overdub. I created three different loops using the same input. The last two used retro loops.