Tag: Thor iPad

  • Korg Gadget, Stroke Machine, and Thor all get Important iOS Updates

    Korg Gadget, Stroke Machine, and Thor all get Important iOS Updates

    In the past two weeks, three of the leading iOS music apps received vital updates that significantly enhance their functionality. If you want to learn more about Korg Gadget, Stroke Machine, and Thor, check out our previous articles here at TabMuse. Read on further to get the latest news about these updates.

    Korg Gadget adds Landscape Mode, Ableton Live Support, Two New Gadgets

    Two new gadgets highlight the recent update to Korg’s Gadget beatmaker app. Unfortunately, Abu Dhabi and Bilbao are only available through in-app purchase, and are priced a bit too high at $9.99 each. For an app — already including 15 gadgets — that normally costs $40, $4.99 makes much more sense as a price point for an individual gadget.

    Korg Gadget in Landscape Mode
    Korg Gadget is a natural in landscape mode, one of the nice changes in its latest update. Screenshot by Author.

    The new gadgets are suitable for anyone using samples in their music. Abu Dhabi is a cool looking beat slicer, and Bilbao is sample player that follows the same mapping as Gadget’s London drum machine, making it easy to swap out one for the other in a project. Surprisingly, Bilbao has no capabilities to use a mic to record samples on the fly — an oversight by Korg. Both gadgets allow the importing of your own samples.

    Support for landscape mode is a great addition. Considering my affinity for Korg’s iPolysix and iMS-20 apps, the original portrait-only orientation of Gadget never felt quite right. It’s easy to switch between the two using the accelerometer.

    Other enhancements in this Gadget update include upgraded support for external MIDI controllers — something I can’t wait to check out once I get a new iPad. (The 30-pin connector in my iPad 2 only works for charging these days.) Korg also added integration with Ableton Live, making it easy to port projects from Gadget to Live. Native 64-bit audio support rounds out the new features.

    Stroke Machine wears the iOS Drum Machine Mantle

    Wolfram Franke has been burning the midnight oil and the result is version 2.0 of his incredibly deep iOS drum machine app, Stroke Machine. The ability to compose beats in any time signature known to beast is the big selling point of this update to me — not that I use them all. A pad screen allows you to play beats with a noticeable lack of latency sure to make Android owners extremely jealous.

    Stroke Machine’s stability is also greatly improved; I regularly write beats with nary a glitch or crash. Still, this is a professional-level music app that gets the most out of the resource-constrained environment of the iPad, so iPad Air owners can expect to enjoy the best performance.

    Audiobus 2.1 support allows the saving of kits and patterns within an AB patch. Fresh support for MIDI CC learn enhances the app’s use with external MIDI controllers. Additionally, each sound/voice can now use its own MIDI channel. Boom!

    Thor also adds Audiobus 2.1 Support

    The excellent iOS version of Thor, Propellerheads’ synth originally introduced as part of Reason, also received a fresh update recently. The most notable changes involve support for Inter App Audio and Audiobus 2.1. Now, like with Stroke Machine, Thor’s patch details can be stored as part of an Audiobus project. Other bug fixes and performance improvements come along for the ride.

    So there you have it, three important updates sure to make music creation on an iPad more fun and rewarding. After watching a video of someone using Gadget’s Abu Dhabi beat slicer, I am inspired to check it out. When I do, expect a more detailed review here at TabMuse.

  • Review: Thor Polysonic Synthesizer Thunders onto the iPad

    Review: Thor Polysonic Synthesizer Thunders onto the iPad

    First seen as the flagship synth for their desktop recording environment, Reason, Propellerhead Software recently released Thor for the iPad. A modular synthesizer with benefits, Thor is simply a must have for iPad musicians. I’ve never had more fun creating new synth patches with any other app, software plug-in, or hardware synth* for that matter.

    Thor Polysonic Synthesizer for the iPad Features

    • iPad Version of Classic Reason Synthesizer
    • Contains over 1,000 Synth Patches
    • Easy to Understand Modular Synth Architecture
    • Patches Compatible with Reason 4.5
    • Six Oscillator Types
    • Four Filter Types
    • Three Envelopes/Dual LFOs/Delay and Chorus
    • Versatile Modulation Bus
    • Step Sequencer Allows Odd Time Signatures
    • Audiobus Compatible
    • Normally Priced at $14.99 at the App Store

    The app’s clear, intuitive interface makes it a joy to work with. And most importantly, its sound is top notch — rivaling that of the Moog Animoog, Waldorf’s Nave, or Arturia’s iMini.

    A Modular Synth for the Masses

    Thor’s synth architecture combines the power of modular synthesis with a measure of clarity that makes it easy to get right in and create your own patches. Sure, the app comes with over one-thousand patches which reveal both the breadth and depth of sonic possibilities, but it is just too much fun to roll your own sounds. When starting a new patch from scratch, the app wires up some common modular routings, allowing you to dive right into sound design.

     

    Thor Screenshot 1
    Thor features a beautiful interface on the iPad. Screenshot by Author.

    The Knobs screen is where the meat of Thor programming lurks. Four panes cover oscillators, filters, envelopes, and effects — it is possible to have two panes expanded at all times. Thor sports three different oscillators with six different oscillator types: analog, multi, wavetable, FM, phase modulation, and noise. It is possible to ring modulate the two oscillators; the variety of sounds is nearly limitless.

    Thor has three filters. Two are at the oscillator level with a variety of routings available on the Knobs screen. The third filter is global and affects the post-mixed sound. Four different filter types include Low Pass Ladder, State Variable, Comb, and Format. The latter works for adding vocal-like filtering.

    A wave shaper adds to the sonic control capabilities, and a standard set of LFOs, envelopes, a mixer and effects round out the sound engine. What is really cool about Thor is the powerful modulation bus sharing its own screen with the step sequencer. It is possible to route practically any modulation source to a destination — both audio or control data. It is a breeze to use and opens up even more sonic possibilities.

    Performing with Thor

    Thor’s virtual keyboard includes a variety of features putting it near the top of the iPad synth world. Where you tap each key controls its velocity and swiping either up or down adds aftertouch. It is possible to scrunch or stretch the keys, highlight or filter them by key, and the strum feature is a great way to trigger guitar patches or even something weirder.

    Thor Screenshot 2
    Thor sports a robust modulation matrix, which I am lax in utilizing in this image. Cool step sequencer too! Screenshot by Author.

    Thor provides step sequencer for each patch with up to 16 steps — emphasis on the “up to.” Yes, it is possible to do odd time signatures, so everyone can tap their foot in 15/16 or 5/8. By using the modulation bus to route the MIDI Note event to the sequencer’s transposition setting, you can use the virtual keyboard (or one externally connected using Core MIDI) to modulate the sequencer; just make sure you write the sequence in the key of C if you (or others) want to play along with the sequence in key (as Quarkspace discovered during one jam session).

    Thor may in fact be the best iOS synth app for combining sonic power with a huge fun factor. Personally, I’ve never had this much joy creating my own synth patches — hardware, software, or tablet. This app belongs in the library of every iOS musician.

    * — Note that I have a Moog Sub 37 on pre-order.