As we promised last week, this week’s show is going to feature apps to make you a mobile maestro. That’s right, today we are bringing you the five best music editing apps.
If you to create beats and rhythms the you need the fantastic Beatwave. This thumping app is already in its second edition, with refinements made to is intuitive interface to ensure you can easily loop and layer your samples to wonderful effect. You can just add and instrument, set it to repeat, and then play around with its temp, add in other tracks, and even import music from other apps. The design is great too, giving you enough visual that you know what changes you are making. Sample, record, share – I am certain you will be a success.
If you like music and you have nice and agile fingers, then you could have a lot of fun with Drumpads. This percussion tool had different modes for all styles of music electronics, trance, dubstep... right down to some spooky beats for Halloween. Each month introduces a new sets of sounds, which are happily accompanied by Youtube tutorials so you can get the most out of them. You can record and share your creations too – which is probably the best bit, just be careful you don´t lose too many friends with your practice sessions before you actually get good.
Figure is our next app and it’s the perfect app to get you feeling like a digital DJ. Figure is designed to work brilliantly with the touch interface, utilizing gestures, swipes, touch, and drag across its multiple musical tools to let you manipulate its different beats to create the track you want. It includes three layers of sound for you to manipulate, letting you choose sounds, control the beat, and even alter intensity of the individual elements. It’s marvelous, but only available for iOS – but Android and Windows Phone users can give Music Maker Jam a try instead.
The universe is the best composer out there man. And while I may have made that sound like divisive hippy rhetoric, physical laws absoloutly have their own tempos and vibration to make music. And this is where MUSYC comes in, an game that has you playing with gravity and other forces. With a powerful physics engine to interact with and a beautiful aesthetic, it all feels intuitive and pleasing, but is really the music that results from the various interactions that really make MUSYC something special.
A simple way to make beats and music is to use your mouth – but just because it’s an easy to lay down a beat, doesn’t mean that you will be any good at it. Fortunately, a simple way to make it sound like you are a beatboxing master is with Keezy. Record yourself making individual sounds, then simply move them together by dragging them into place with your fingertips to make fantastic, personalized percussive loops. Brilliant for iOS users, and Android users can enjoy Beat Box if they want something similar.
That’s it for our five musical apps, I hope you found something to get your creative juices flowing. Next time we will be back with the top 5 video editing apps. Until then, Like or Dislike to let us know what you thought of this video and I will see you next week.
If you to create beats and rhythms the you need the fantastic Beatwave. This thumping app is already in its second edition, with refinements made to is intuitive interface to ensure you can easily loop and layer your samples to wonderful effect. You can just add and instrument, set it to repeat, and then play around with its temp, add in other tracks, and even import music from other apps. The design is great too, giving you enough visual that you know what changes you are making. Sample, record, share – I am certain you will be a success.
If you like music and you have nice and agile fingers, then you could have a lot of fun with Drumpads. This percussion tool had different modes for all styles of music electronics, trance, dubstep... right down to some spooky beats for Halloween. Each month introduces a new sets of sounds, which are happily accompanied by Youtube tutorials so you can get the most out of them. You can record and share your creations too – which is probably the best bit, just be careful you don´t lose too many friends with your practice sessions before you actually get good.
Figure is our next app and it’s the perfect app to get you feeling like a digital DJ. Figure is designed to work brilliantly with the touch interface, utilizing gestures, swipes, touch, and drag across its multiple musical tools to let you manipulate its different beats to create the track you want. It includes three layers of sound for you to manipulate, letting you choose sounds, control the beat, and even alter intensity of the individual elements. It’s marvelous, but only available for iOS – but Android and Windows Phone users can give Music Maker Jam a try instead.
The universe is the best composer out there man. And while I may have made that sound like divisive hippy rhetoric, physical laws absoloutly have their own tempos and vibration to make music. And this is where MUSYC comes in, an game that has you playing with gravity and other forces. With a powerful physics engine to interact with and a beautiful aesthetic, it all feels intuitive and pleasing, but is really the music that results from the various interactions that really make MUSYC something special.
A simple way to make beats and music is to use your mouth – but just because it’s an easy to lay down a beat, doesn’t mean that you will be any good at it. Fortunately, a simple way to make it sound like you are a beatboxing master is with Keezy. Record yourself making individual sounds, then simply move them together by dragging them into place with your fingertips to make fantastic, personalized percussive loops. Brilliant for iOS users, and Android users can enjoy Beat Box if they want something similar.
That’s it for our five musical apps, I hope you found something to get your creative juices flowing. Next time we will be back with the top 5 video editing apps. Until then, Like or Dislike to let us know what you thought of this video and I will see you next week.
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Tech