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.

OT: How not to make video clips

A bit for a laughter: Post a videoclip that's so worse that it will become hilarious.

Let me start off:

Comments

  • My favorite:

  • edited March 2020

    @scarletjerry said:
    My favorite:

    We call Eduard Khil the Trololo man here.
    BTW this song is often referred to in the subject of forum trolling. 😁

    Excerpt from Wikipedia:

    "Trololo"'s popularity in turn re-ignited interest in Khil's singing career aside from his vocalised performance; for a time, the "Trololo" website[24] included a petition for Khil to come out of retirement to perform on a world tour.
    
        Khil: I haven't heard anything about it. It's nice, of course! Thanks for good news! There is a backstory about this song. Originally, we had lyrics written for this song but they were poor. I mean, they were good, but we couldn't publish them at that time. They contained words like these: "I'm riding my stallion on a prairie, so-and-so mustang, and my beloved Mary is thousand miles away knitting a stocking for me". Of course, we failed to publish it at that time, and we, Arkady Ostrovsky and I, decided to make it a vocalisation. But the essence remained in the title. The song is very playful – it has no lyrics, so we had to make up something so that people would listen to it, and so this was an interesting arrangement.
    
        — Eduard Khil[30], (in Russian)
    
    
        Arkady Ostrovsky's son, Mikhail, gives another version of the vocalise story:
    
        Nobody banned its lyrics, but my father just composed the music during the period of his disagreement with Lev Oshanin. The latter told him that the lyrics are more important in a song and that a composer is nothing without a lyricist. So Dad told him during the argument, "Well, I don't need your verses at all, I'll manage without them."
    
        — Mikhail Ostrovsky, Rossiyskaya Gazeta[31], (in Russian)
    

    Make up something so that people would listen to it.
    Priceless 😅

Sign In or Register to comment.