

Of course with hardware you mostly just whip it out, plug it in and play which is not quite the same with said:Ĭouldn't agree more except I did end up paying for a looper pedal. Mind you, some hardware companies are better than others at updating their firmware. I think hardware will always have the problem where you have to adapt to it rather then try and convince few fellow users on this forum to send a feature request to the friendly developer. A fully featured Boomerang or a flagship Boss will set you back at least 8 x £50. Whether you need those extra features is another story. The problem is that the $50 hardware looper will give you roughly 18% of what say, Loopy is capable off.
Guitar to loopy hd Bluetooth#
At this point I need to save up for a Bluetooth pedal, since my guitar interface is taking up the lightning port.

I've tried quite a few of the loopers and I think instead of spending 5x $10 for the apps I should have bought a $50 looper pedal instead.
Guitar to loopy hd pro#
Good grief that's a lot of apps I don't use much.IMHO Quantiloop Pro as loved it’s GUI and setup, personally couldn’t get my head around midi bindings in Loopy HD. I use this iPad as a dedicated device on my desktop with an iConnectMIDI2+ so it's not a huge deal for me. Maybe you'd have better luck, but I wouldn't bother probably. I've opened and noodled with all of these, but haven't used most of them in depth since loading them up, so I can't vouch for how dependable they are overall.Īlso, Audiobus appears in the store, loads, and opens, but it's buggy as all get out. Here's what I was able to get working, after removing those already mentioned.Ĭubasis (impressed with how well this works)
Guitar to loopy hd download#
No guarantees, but I think that so long as your iPad has iOS 5.1.1 or greater, you're allowed to download legacy versions no matter when you make the purchase. I was able to get quite a bit of stuff working on there, and I'm pretty sure I purchased many of these apps after I upgraded to a newer iPad. I recently went through this with my old iPad1 when it got too slow to play Netflix for Mom. A good idea to backup these apps as they may be gone forever if your setup on the iPad one gets screwed up. If you purchased apps a long while ago, they may still be downloadable to the iPad one. You can use a midi sequencer such as Genome to control the apps and can often record within the app, and then copy and paste these recordings into Multitrack DAW if you can't get an Audiobus chain going. Multitrack DAW works well but has no midi. You can often record within apps and then export the recording via AudioShare. The version of Audiobus has only one sound chain. An app may run on iOS 5, but if it's been updated it might require a newer version of Audiobus which can't be installed on iOS 5. You'll have to be careful about how many notes you play at once and the complexity of the patches or you can easily get glitches.Īs far as using Audiobus, you can pretty much expect challenges. Sunrizer, Animoog, WaveGenerator, NLog Pro. The guitar apps like Amplitube, Jamup Pro and the like work well.ĭrum machines, Impaktor, Funkbox, MoDrum. You might want to look into midi apps such as TB Midi Stuff, SoundPrism Pro, MIDI Designer Pro, Chordion, Genome, Lemur, etc.
