Audiobus: Use your music apps together.

What is Audiobus?Audiobus is an award-winning music app for iPhone and iPad which lets you use your other music apps together. Chain effects on your favourite synth, run the output of apps or Audio Units into an app like GarageBand or Loopy, or select a different audio interface output for each app. Route MIDI between apps — drive a synth from a MIDI sequencer, or add an arpeggiator to your MIDI keyboard — or sync with your external MIDI gear. And control your entire setup from a MIDI controller.

Download on the App Store

Audiobus is the app that makes the rest of your setup better.

Waaaay OT: What is Everyone Reading?

2

Comments

  • @RustiK said:
    I am actually writing.........attempting to write a screen play.

    Keep at it!

    My friends have launched this writers motivation/community building project. It might help. http://prolifiko.com/

  • Recently re-read 1984. I found it somewhat more disconcerting this time around.

  • I highly recommend the 33 1/3 series.

  • Finnegans Wake, again....but this time in reverse. It's no different.

  • Skinny Legs and All ~ Tom Robbins

  • @nrgb said:

    I highly recommend the 33 1/3 series.

    Thanks. Will take a look/add it to my endless Trello list of books, most of which I will be dead before I get to. I already think of it as a small legacy. Maybe we should start a thread with lists of books we haven't read but intend to and invite scores out of ten/reviews to help us narrow things down :)

  • @nrgb said:

    I highly recommend the 33 1/3 series.

    I have read several of them, and that is one of the best.
    My local library is pretty profligate when it comes to acquiring music related books.

  • edited August 2017

    Hey, and let's not get too highbrow, Saturday night after all....

    book.jpg 102.7K
  • @brice said:
    Finnegans Wake, again....but this time in reverse. It's no different.

    Nice!

  • @JohnnyGoodyear said:
    Hey, and let's not get too highbrow, Saturday night after all....

    Isn't there a movie based on that?

  • @JohnnyGoodyear said:
    Hey, and let's not get too highbrow, Saturday night after all....

    Majesty of book cover design. The typography. The composition. And that glorious GD glove.

  • Joe Jackson - A Cure for Gravity

    Nancy Isenberg - White Trash: The 400-Year Untold History of Class in America

  • @supanorton said:
    Joe Jackson - A Cure for Gravity

    Nancy Isenberg - White Trash: The 400-Year Untold History of Class in America

    I read the Isenberg book this summer. What a great book about some ugly truths.

  • @Arpseechord said:
    The Crystal Cave by Mary Stewart

    Great series! Haven't read it in a very long time, though...

    @JangoMango said:
    Pornhub

    More my speed these days. :naughty:

    Truth is I have trouble finding time to play music, much less read something for pleasure. I honestly can't remember the last book I picked up. Maybe Game of Thrones, but I'm sure I didn't finish it. What am I doing wrong?!

  • @JeffChasteen said:
    Me:
    In The Garden of Beasts by Erik Larson. A nonfiction novel about the American ambassador to Germany in 1933.

    Everything Is Combustible by Richard Lloyd. A memoir by the guitar genius. Mine is an advance copy, but it will be on the shelves in August.

    I recommend both of these books.

    How about you?

    In the Garden of Beasts is excellent- read it a couple years ago.

    Am currently reading Paul Auster's latest novel 4321.

  • infinite jest by david foster wallace. i'm not sure if i'll finish it though. bicep fatigue

  • Art Sex Music by Cosey Fanni Tutti.

  • @Bluepunk said:
    Art Sex Music by Cosey Fanni Tutti.

    That's on my list, I bet that's an interesting read.

  • @mrcanister said:
    infinite jest by david foster wallace. i'm not sure if i'll finish it though. bicep fatigue

    Good book, stays with you that one.

    It does require commitment though.

  • encenc
    edited August 2017

    Strange one this as I hate reading manuals, but I downloaded and started to read the TR808 operation Manual and it's superb .. well written and very in depth unlike instruument manuals of today. The "manual" for the TR8 is a fold out bit of paper. Also have Bernard summers chapter and verse on the go.

  • @MonzoPro said:

    @Bluepunk said:
    Art Sex Music by Cosey Fanni Tutti.

    That's on my list, I bet that's an interesting read.

    It is. Doesn't give us too much information about how and why TG created their beauty, but the diary scribbles are worth the entrance price alone. Sad. I miss them, and their music. You know this stuff..... Is there anything out there (apart from you and Joc) that I should be listening to please?

  • The last things I read were Peter Guralnick's Sam Phillips book and his Sam Cooke one. They're very good, but so exhaustive in their details and research that I haven't picked anything up for a couple of months.

  • The Undoing Project. Michael Lewis

  • Musical Truth - Mark Devlin

  • @Bluepunk said:

    @MonzoPro said:

    @Bluepunk said:
    Art Sex Music by Cosey Fanni Tutti.

    That's on my list, I bet that's an interesting read.

    It is. Doesn't give us too much information about how and why TG created their beauty, but the diary scribbles are worth the entrance price alone. Sad. I miss them, and their music. You know this stuff..... Is there anything out there (apart from you and Joc) that I should be listening to please?

    I'll have a think - apart from old favourites such as Nurse With Wound, Faust, Hacker Farm etc. most of the new stuff I listen to though is random discoveries via The Wire mag, YouTube and Soundcloud.

  • @oat_phipps said:
    The last things I read were Peter Guralnick's Sam Phillips book and his Sam Cooke one. They're very good, but so exhaustive in their details and research that I haven't picked anything up for a couple of months.

    Those are both excellent.
    Unlike so many other music scribblers, Guralnick is a scholar, not a myth maker.

  • Livets Bog (The book of life) volume 1 of 7. Several volumes have been translated into english and german and can be read online for free. Highly recommended!

    http://www.martinus.dk/en/ttt/index.php?bog=51

  • @TheVimFuego yeah, i'm going to stick with it. i'm pretty intrigued by the main premise, and i'm a 3rd of the way thru. there're times when haven't got clue what he's on about tho and i'll probably be like one of those tennis academy kids with one really overdeveloped arm when i'm finished reading it. hehe.

  • @JeffChasteen said:

    @supanorton said:
    Joe Jackson - A Cure for Gravity

    Nancy Isenberg - White Trash: The 400-Year Untold History of Class in America

    I read the Isenberg book this summer. What a great book about some ugly truths.

    Yes, indeed. I like where she's coming from, and there's some well supported history/interpretation in much of it. Sometimes, I find her arguments to be a bit far fetched and presumptuous. I also find it hard to believe that so many Americans, of which I am one, are so naive about the realities of class in the US. All in all, I am enjoying it very much.

Sign In or Register to comment.