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.
Comments
Lol! 😂 I hate social media, so there's that. Driving can also be a pain when I'm trying to drive proper and yet there are a bunch of shitheads on the road. At least in the States.
It’s much easier to get a license here too, so people are in cars and driving with very little effort.
My wife and I were in the DMV to update licenses after moving state, and an elderly lady was doing road sign recognition close enough for us to hear. The DMV guy was giving her clues as she barely knew any of them, and most people close enough were laughing when she didn’t recognize a rail crossing and he started going “Choo choo!”
I’m not 60’s or older yet but I hang out and play gigs with a lot of older musicians. Best musicians I know are the old timers.
This coming January, much to my astonishment, I will turn…
70!
As Mickey Mantle famously said, “If I’d known I was going to live this long, I’d have taken better care of myself.”
I still do pull-ups (chin-ups) and a few gymnastic exercises every morning and don't have the back problems I frequently had 20 or 30 years ago. Also stopped drinking alcohol and smoking weed 16 years ago. A bit boring sometimes, but might help staying physically and mentally fit, hopefully for a few more nice, creative and productive years.
I am 71, I have composed many songs since the mid 80s using a Kawai Q80 32 track sequencer and sound modules that was connected to a 3 keyboard rig that I used to take out and perform at various venues, but since using Cubasis on the iPad and having dozens and dozens of synth apps I feel even more enthusiastic about composing new songs with everything right in front of me on this one single iPad connected to one single 61 note midi controller and a pair of 250W powered speakers, everything fits in the back of my car 👍
This technology came a bit late for us but we can still enjoy it …….while we can lol
Very true 👍
Same here. I'm 71. Not seriously doing music for anything but my own amusement. Retired pensioner with time on my hands.
According to the shrink I’m emotionally between 9 and 12.
My health app says I’m 35.
Jack been my best friend for almost 40 years.
My new suurgeon said last month if I keep smoking and abusing “stuff” I’ll never reach 50. Then he actually looked at the medical file and got confused.
I think I’m immortal. Fuck age.
Link please.
Brat Stop, always a fun place to play. Not too far from home, appreciative crowds. Still open I think(?)
I checked on Google, and it seems to still be open.
eh ... still tryin' to get used to this new fangled teknology stuff. I miss my modem and bboard system. Why the damn kids these days think they need more than a trusty old 80286 PC and a 2400 baud modem is beyond me.
2400baud - show off. Mine was 300/300 or 1200/75 !
@wim @BiancaNeve I remember my Kaypro 10. It had a 10Mb hard drive that I thought I would never fill up, and didn’t. It had a snappy little 8-bit Z80 that ran CP/M. Best of all, it was built like a suitcase that I could take anywhere, just like my iPad, only 30 pounds heavier. I learned how to write code in C-Basic and used dBase II. I wrote some cost estimating software that my employer used for about 10 years. I recently saw one for sale on a vintage computer site selling for nearly $2800.
Interesting thing about CP/M. Digital Research CEO, Gary Kildall, was approached by IBM to license his operating system. He decided he was more interested in playing golf that day. He left his wife to negotiate. Big mistake. She balked and IBM called some little guy named Bill Gates. He immediately called Seattle Computing and offered them $50,000 for their little OS. They jumped on the offer. He licensed PC DOS to IBM, but retained the rights to MS DOS. I hope Mr. Kildall at least had a good game of golf that day!
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I wouldn't mind going bald but looking at my relatives seems like a 50-50 chance lol
Russo's great. I like what he added to tunes like "White Sun".
Rick Beato's interview of Michael McDonald earlier this year inspired me to check out the Doobie's catalog, from the first album onwards, and that all turned me into a fan. I'm fascinated by how random event shaped their history, like how the 4 founders met, how McDonald "went from couch surfing to arena playing in days" (title of another interview video), etc.
McDonald deciding in his 70s to finally learn how to work the drawbars of Hammonds/clonewheels is kinda impressive in its own right.
1 more year to go. It would explain why this place is so good. A good mix of older and younger folk.
Known sentence I’ve saw on a sign many years ago:
”Die so young as possible, so late as possible”…
Ahh to be young again. I remember when 'thirty something' was a term. People not wanting to admit what end of the thirties spectrum they were on, hehe. Oh to be 16 at the mall hanging out, wasting time forever.
67 here and honored to be in the company of so many other aging (I mean, “highly experienced”) musicians.
Was twenty in the seventies now coming up seventy in the twenties.
Always a supportive response here for my jazz-inclined works. I guessed that interest would likely be from folk of a certain age. Much appreciated. Keep well.