I believe Seven Systems has claimed that Xequence can do the above. i’m Not sure anything does sysex, actually, but it’d be nice since some hardware synths aren’t too careful about ccs vs sysex. I just mean that, if a midi device can send it, the program can record it, play it back in the same time/order in which it was sent, and hopefully also display it somehow. I guess you could try a desktop computer version of SunVox as it's donation-ware (it's "free" but donation is expected if the user likes it). The online manual mentions Undo/Redo as keyboard shortcuts but I don't recall finding those functions on iPhone. Solar Lune's tutorials on YouTube are very helpful. I started using it because I had a 16GB iPhone that couldn't handle Korg Gadget's size. I've been catching up on the Xequence thread on the AB forum, and seems that Xequence may be able to launch MIDI clips, or at least MIDI loops.Īs for SunVox, I avoided it for a while because I was intimidated by the retro tracker-like look, but once I got past the cosmetics, I found that it's actually very user friendly. I've never owned an MPC but I kind of think I understand. I’m fine getting external things to play samples, if I need it. I mean clip launching as in launching midi clips, repeating, at a screen press, MPC style. Sorry I think maybe I’m using the wrong term. Forgot if SunVox has undo/redo - it does show MIDI data fairly clearly. Not sure what you mean by arbitrary MIDI data, unless you're talking about linear sequencing - Xequence might be better suited to that. Or you could try SunVox, which supports any time signature, individual pattern lengths, tempo changes, can play samples. You might have to convert your audio clips to SF2 but there seem to be tools out there for that kind of job. You could load your samples into an app like BS-16i then have Xequence trigger it over MIDI. Yeah, Xequence is really "just" a MIDI sequencer in the purest sense - as people understood MIDI sequencers to be in the pre-Ableton era. worth checking out? I'm only really interested in the MIDI part. Can anyone who has these verify? Also, are any of the iOS daws - fl studio mobile, cubasis, etc. Genome seems like it has an awesome clip launcher, but doesn't have arbitrary time signatures, and I don't think you can have clips that are in a different time signature from the song as a whole. Xequence seems perfect except that there's no clip launcher. Does this exist? I'm thinking maybe Xequencer? I'd rather not go with a full-blown iOS DAW, but maybe that's the only way to get all of this?ĥ55x555 wrote:Yeah, the two I'm still looking at are Genome and Xequence. There are some other things that'd be nice, but this seems like the bare minimum to me to be able to reliably get shit done with an iPad. * Tempo control of individual clips would be nice (direct support for polyrhythms), but I can live without it. * It must have undo and redo, of at least a few levels * Recorded midi data should be editable and viewable in a somewhat usable fashion * It must allow simultaneous sequences of different lengths * It must have decent but optional quantization control for that data * It must be able to record and play back arbitrary midi data with good timing * It must have the ability to route to arbitary midi devices/IAA apps for different clips/tracks/whatever paradigm * It must have a clip launch interface with some kind of clip launch quantization But it seems like none of them tick all the boxes to serve as The Sequencer Which Can Always Do What I Want (however no fun and inelegant it is to make it do what I want). There are some really amazing apps like Fugue Machine, Concentric Rhythm, and Lemur, all of which I might get and use to excellent effect for one or another purpose. I've been shopping for an iPad sequencer for live use, and the iOS world is.strange.
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