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When Connect Irig To Ipad Garageband Music Comes Out

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When Connect Irig To Ipad Garageband Music Comes Out
  1. When Connect Irig To Ipad Garageband Music Comes Out Free
  2. When Connect Irig To Ipad Garageband Music Comes Out Free
  3. When Connect Irig To Ipad Garageband Music Comes Out 2017

And while iRig 2 is the ideal companion to AmpliTube for iOS, it also works with any other recording, processing, tuning or music app. Find the interface that’s right for you IK Multimedia offers the industry’s widest range of interfaces, controllers and amplifiers to connect to your computer or mobile device. Jun 09, 2011 This is something that is very easy to do on my macbook using either garageband or logic express. However, I am not sure how to do it on the ipad or if it is even possible. It should be similar to the method of connecting an electric guitar. Most people use iRig for a guitar, but there is not a comparable product to connect a keyboard.

The world is your stage. This is your instrument.

GarageBand for iOS makes it incredibly simple to play, record and share your music, no matter where you are. Tap into a wide range of instruments from around the world. And now with the Sound Library, you can choose and download more free instrument and loop packs when new sounds are released, to help you easily craft songs in your favourite styles — all directly from your iPhone, iPad or iPod touch.

Download GarageBand for iOS

Play Make music. With or without an instrument.

The moment you launch GarageBand, you can start making music. Play stunningly realistic Touch Instruments, instantly build big beats and create music like a DJ — all with just a few taps. The all-new Sound Library lets you explore and download sound packs tailored to help you build your tracks with just the right elements for the style you want.

When Connect Irig To Ipad Garageband Music Comes Out Free

Live Loops makes it fun and easy to create electronic music. Simply tap cells and columns in the grid to trigger musical loops and then build your own original arrangements. You can even use Remix FX to add creative, DJ‑style transitions with Multi‑Touch gestures or by just moving your iOS device.

If you can tap, you can play.

GarageBand comes with beautiful and highly expressive Touch Instruments that sound and respond just like the real thing. Play keyboards, guitars and bass, as well as sounds designed for EDM and Hip Hop. Smart Instruments make you sound like a pro — even if you’ve never played a note. And now you can explore the sounds of Asia with traditional Chinese and Japanese instruments, including the guzheng, the koto and an array of taiko drums.

When it comes to how you make your beats, the choice is yours — from jamming live on virtual drum kits to instant drag‑and‑done Smart Drums. The all‑new Beat Sequencer lets you easily build rhythms using sounds and a workflow inspired by classic drum machines. And Drummer gives you access to a team of virtual session drummers, each playing a popular electronic or acoustic style with a signature kit.

A deep collection of electronic drum sounds from a variety of genres can be stacked and layered to create your own grooves. Simply tap to activate any combination of steps on each track. Add or subtract to experiment in real time, all while the sequencer plays.

When Connect Irig To Ipad Garageband Music Comes Out Free

Virtual drummers representing specific genres automatically play along with your song, while simple controls let you fine‑tune their performance. Drummers can even listen to your riff and come up with the perfect complementary beat. And GarageBand now includes three percussionists who each have their own signature nine‑piece kits.
Tap out your groove on hardware‑style drum pads inspired by vintage beat boxes to create an electronic drum part.
Sit behind a virtual acoustic kit and perform your rhythms from a classic drummer’s point of view.
Instantly create a beat by simply dragging individual drum parts onto a grid. Choose the sounds you like and let ’em rip.

Plug it in. Tear it up.

Plug in your guitar and choose from a van‑load of amps and stompbox effects that deliver the perfect feel — from dreamy soundscapes to stadium‑sized rock.1 Our bass amps let you hold down the bass line with clean or distorted rigs modelled after vintage and modern amplifiers.

GarageBand includes Alchemy, one of the world’s most advanced synthesisers. Explore hundreds of Apple‑designed Patches, perfect for EDM, Hip Hop, Indie, Rock and Pop music. Use the expressive Transform Pad to morph between sounds in real time, or just have fun using the simple Chord Strips that help anyone play like an expert.

Sound Library. Your all‑access pass to a world of sounds.

With the new Sound Library, you’ve got instant access to an incredible and expanding collection of free loops and instruments from directly inside the app. Explore and download Apple‑designed sound packs that include Touch Instruments, Apple Loops, Live Loops templates and instrument presets that will help you produce tracks in a wide variety of genres and styles. You can easily manage your library as it grows, and GarageBand will even notify you when new sound packs are released and ready for you to download.

Record A full recording studio. To go.

With its powerful and intuitive interface, GarageBand makes it easy to capture, adjust and mix your performances into a finished composition. Build a complete song using any combination of Touch Instruments, audio recordings and loops.

Work with up to an astounding 32 tracks with GarageBand for iOS.2 With a compatible third‑party audio interface, you can even plug in the entire band and record everyone simultaneously on separate tracks. Take multiple passes to nail your performance using Multi‑Take Recording — just choose any Touch Instrument, tap Record, and play continuously over a looping song section. GarageBand automatically captures each one, and you simply choose your favourite.

Fine‑tune your tracks and record each tap, swipe and twist of the knobs. Draw and edit volume automation for precise control over your mix. And let the Simple EQ and Compressor keep your tracks sounding crisp and clear. For even more detailed control, take advantage of 10 track‑mixing effects directly from Logic Pro, like the Visual EQ, Bitcrusher, Vocal Transformer and more.

Audio Unit Extensions let you use your favourite compatible third‑party instrument and effect plug‑ins directly in your GarageBand song. Browse the App Store and download your selections from leading music app developers like Moog Music.

iCloud GarageBand everywhere. Tweak your tracks. On any device.

iCloud allows you to keep your GarageBand sessions up to date across all your iOS devices. Using iCloud Drive, you can import song sketches to your Mac and take them even further, then share your finished piece on any of your devices. You can also import a portable version of a Logic Pro X project and add more tracks. When you bring the project back into Logic Pro, the original tracks are all there, along with the new ones you’ve added in GarageBand.

GarageBand for Mac

Your personal music creation studio.

GarageBand for iOS

Play, record, arrange and mix — wherever you go.

Music Memos

An app to capture your song ideas. Whenever inspiration strikes.

What is Audiobus? — Audiobus isan award-winning music app for iPhone and iPad which lets you useyour other music apps together. Chain effects on your favouritesynth, run the output of apps or Audio Units into an app likeGarageBand or Loopy, or select a different audio interface outputfor each app. Route MIDI between apps — drive asynth from a MIDI sequencer, or add an arpeggiator to your MIDIkeyboard — 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.

edited February 2017 in General App Discussion

I have $200 burning a hole in my pocket on Amazon, so not too much money but enough I could combine with other sources to buy something passable. I have a rather small practice amp and a full size stereo to play my guitar through at home. I can plug my iPad into both and get OK sound. I am going to be traveling to practice sessions and will need to play with others, the practice amp can get loud enough but the sound isn't great for a 6' speaker. I am thinking I have a few choices:

  1. Buy a straight modeling amp like a Line6, and play the guitar through it. No iPad.
  2. Buy a PA system and play the guitar through ToneStack on my iPad.
  3. Buy a guitar amp and play the guitar through the iPad to the amp via the headphone jack into the phono or RCA inputs.

Thoughts on which would give a decent sound and decent flexibility? I usually just play for myself so thinking about playing with others is all new to me.

Comments

When Connect Irig To Ipad Garageband Music Comes Out 2017

  • There's a couple of threads about the amplifii amp recently; might be an option?

    I think it's really a question of whether you want that square box monitor near you while you play. I go iPad straight into a PA because I'm done hauling amps around. But it took me a while to get used to the lack of that amp sitting next to me. And then there's tubes (which make a huge difference even if just in the power amp section). I love the sound of 'em but I've made the choice of convenience and am quite happy. YMMV.

  • I play my ipad through PA. I hook it up to my Pioneer reciever, two KLH speaker's and one of my guitar innerfaces (iriffport, focusrite 2i4, Griffin studio connect, or irig HD)..and I'm set. I think it sounds great. Plenty loud.

  • Dude I have this baby

    I use It at our Mens worship services and this baby is soooo loud seriously I literally have to bring it down cause the Soundman gets on my case. I have it where in clean settings so no onboard effects are on and with the single tube it warms up my tone sooooo sweetly!

    Small enough to carry to the gig and looks so good I get so many compliments!

  • edited February 2017

    I wouldnt bother with modeling amps. Better if you can get some tube amp and hook it on your ipad. Either use just the preamp from the amp(by running out from amps fx loop to ipa and not back to amp), then run it into bias or tonestack and turn off the preamp emulation from them. This will get you that sweet tube overdrive sound and the flexibility of modeling amp sims.

    Other way would be to put the ipad on fx loop and use some effects and modeling stuff on ipad and route the sound back to guitar amp(fx loop out to ipad and ipad to fx loop return).

    You can also just use the ipad with some speaker and power amp, BUT you wont get that sweet tube distortion, that you can only get from real tubes(software isnt able to emulate it properly, unless you get axe-fx 2). It does sound pretty good if you play it through decent speaker and power amp. But i would rather go with real tubes than real speaker for best tones.

  • Forget the guitar amp IMO. At home I play through my monitors and when I play out it's through the PA. If you want some kind of amplifier get something that won't color your tone, maybe a keyboard amp. Guitar speakers do a lot to shape the tone, and you don't want that in this scenario.

  • @Matthew said:
    Forget the guitar amp IMO. At home I play through my monitors and when I play out it's through the PA. If you want some kind of amplifier get something that won't color your tone, maybe a keyboard amp. Guitar speakers do a lot to shape the tone, and you don't want that in this scenario.

    If I play through an amp, I run my iPad into the effects in so that it bypasses the pre-amp and just hits the power amp (with glowing 6L6's!). Use neutral sounding speakers..

  • Different strokes for different folks. I've tried it a million times and it never sounds right to my ear. I can get great sounds using ToneStack or Amplitube on my iPad through monitors, but the second I pipe it through an effects return it sounds fake, even with the cabinet simulation turned off. I'm not sure why exactly. Now, taking the effects send out of a preamp or even just a nice pedal and processing it through the iPad is another story.

    @lukesleepwalker said:

    @Matthew said:
    Forget the guitar amp IMO. At home I play through my monitors and when I play out it's through the PA. If you want some kind of amplifier get something that won't color your tone, maybe a keyboard amp. Guitar speakers do a lot to shape the tone, and you don't want that in this scenario.

    If I play through an amp, I run my iPad into the effects in so that it bypasses the pre-amp and just hits the power amp (with glowing 6L6's!). Use neutral sounding speakers..

  • @Matthew said:
    Different strokes for different folks. I've tried it a million times and it never sounds right to my ear. I can get great sounds using ToneStack or Amplitube on my iPad through monitors, but the second I pipe it through an effects return it sounds fake, even with the cabinet simulation turned off. I'm not sure why exactly. Now, taking the effects send out of a preamp or even just a nice pedal and processing it through the iPad is another story.

    Different strokes indeed! I don't bother running my iPad through an amp anymore (as noted above). I just don't think it matters all that much and it's so easy to show up with an iPad, a guitar, an iRig, and a cord.

  • edited February 2017

    Guitar amp. If you are buying something for guitar. The added latency on the ipad (even at 128) as a guitar processor makes it less than ideal, regardless if you like the sounds of the simulators. The disconnect in timing makes it hard to play tight.

  • I run tonestack into a PA. Tonestack has 64 latency option and you can turn the simulation from ultra high to just high or medium and it runs like a dream on my iPhone 6plus. Yes the warmth of tubes is hard to emulate exactly but I think it comes close enough for my taste most of the time.

    Being able to run thru loopy is great too. Can make backing tracks in seconds using a whammy -12half steps and bass amp in tonestack, then switch to a guitar sound to play over it.

    Just my 2 cents

  • @Panthemusicalgoat said:
    I run tonestack into a PA. Tonestack has 64 latency option and you can turn the simulation from ultra high to just high or medium and it runs like a dream on my iPhone 6plus. Yes the warmth of tubes is hard to emulate exactly but I think it comes close enough for my taste most of the time.

    Being able to run thru loopy is great too. Can make backing tracks in seconds using a whammy -12half steps and bass amp in tonestack, then switch to a guitar sound to play over it.

    Just my 2 cents

    I do the same as this. How is your battery life on the 6+ running Tonestack and Loopy? And which interface do you use?

  • Yeah, the technical way to do this is to use either the FX Return (or 'Power Amp IN') jack, if your amp has one. I have about 5 to 7 things you could call 'guitar amps' in my house, and NONE of them have an FX loop, so no luck there. Or, you could plug into a mixer and use some PA speakers, reference monitors, or headphones.

    But, as alluded to above, I never actually do this because even the slightest hint of latency really bothers me, and that seems almost unavoidable on the iPad. I also just don't like to have to worry about additional things like USB or headphone jack output level when I'm using the iPad as an FX suite. Too many affordable analog pedal options on the market now, and I just prefer that experience.

    All that being said, if I were recording a track using an iPad DAW, I may just use the software on the iPad for modeling, just because of convenience. I've experimented, however, with using something like a UCA202 and the proper cables to connect that to a Tech21 or other preamp pedal for a low-latency audio capture (similar to how you might capture an external synth).

  • I have an iLoud. 40 watts, very convenient, very loud. I have not tried it live, as I don't play live, but it's a great little unit. Flat freq response, so no additional coloration, and I use it as a studio monitor as well.

  • Thank you all for your thoughts, I appreciate it. It turns out the answer isn't so easy at all, quite predictably influenced by my needs and desires! I have some things to think about here still and some great options to research.

  • lots of valid points, but the 'use a real tube amp' hint is close to nonsense.
    In particular because current amps (up to nearly $1k) are rather weak compared to vintage specimen.
    You can safely emulate those with BIAS or Tonestack and even outperform them.
    The difference (if any) is in the cabinet, NOT the tube(s).
    Tubes themselves have a rather low share on what's considered 'tube sound' - mostly it's about circuit design and transformers - and the speaker.
    My comment is about classic crunch/distortion, not about metal - that's a different story and imho not even related to tubes at all.

  • For two weeks I've been messing around with garageband and using its amps. Using an Apogee One straight out to monitors I'm not noticing any latency, and I'm a fairly quick jazz player, but I prefer clean tones so maybe that has something to do with it.

    I believe I remember that there is some stereo mixer latency out of the ipad/iphone headphone jack, so any interface using that for audio is likely going to cause perceptible latency.

  • @lukesleepwalker said:

    @Panthemusicalgoat said:
    I run tonestack into a PA. Tonestack has 64 latency option and you can turn the simulation from ultra high to just high or medium and it runs like a dream on my iPhone 6plus. Yes the warmth of tubes is hard to emulate exactly but I think it comes close enough for my taste most of the time.

    Being able to run thru loopy is great too. Can make backing tracks in seconds using a whammy -12half steps and bass amp in tonestack, then switch to a guitar sound to play over it.

    Just my 2 cents

    I do the same as this. How is your battery life on the 6+ running Tonestack and Loopy? And which interface do you use?

    Honestly in airplane mode (so calls don't interrupt and wifi off saves battery) pretty darn good actually. I play hour sets and I haven't had any issues yet. Start at 100% and end up with 40-50% usually. I also put brightness at about half

  • I go via a mixer, so I can fiddle with the EQ a bit. Haven't had any noticeable latency issues.

  • edited February 2017

    I'm thinking about getting an iRig HD 2 since it has a Hi-Z quarter inch out with a FX/Thru switch. I'm also going to use my small pedalboard (tuner, distortion, cabinet simulator) for my base guitar tone and use iOS purely for reverb, delay and other non-essential things. That way if iOS gives me issue I can just flip a switch and I'm not dead in the water.

  • Going straight into a PA, my experience was that input/routing can have a huge effect on latency. I use a Sonic Port VX for my line in to the iPad via lightning connection. I tried sending the processed audio back out via the Sonic Port's stereo outs into a mixer, and the latency was beyond usable. Easily 250ms or more.

    Same set-up, but running the processed audio out of the headphone jack as a mono signal = zero latency. My guess is the A/D converters in the Sonic Port were holding up the signal, sadly.

    I can also say running into an amp head and speaker is bad news, no matter how well you try to 'neutralize' the amp's coloration. Volume was virtually halved compared to playing straight in, and running a cabinet emulation into a cabinet kind of kills any benefit of either. Strangely, in that scenario, fraught with issues as it might have been, I was running out of the Sonic Port's A/D line out and .. no latency. Only thing I can think is the mixer I plugged into had mic preamps already, so perhaps the 'double' conversion of the signal led to the massive latency.

    Anyway, short answer: iPad straight into PA (using headphone out) was zero latency and preserved my guitar tone from JamUp Pro as desired. 1/8 to XLR adaptors are cheap and easy to come by. Beats the hell out of the old days of hauling a 4x12 cab + head + rack mount .. never again, LOL!

  • @Telefunky said:
    lots of valid points, but the 'use a real tube amp' hint is close to nonsense.
    In particular because current amps (up to nearly $1k) are rather weak compared to vintage specimen.
    You can safely emulate those with BIAS or Tonestack and even outperform them.
    The difference (if any) is in the cabinet, NOT the tube(s).
    Tubes themselves have a rather low share on what's considered 'tube sound' - mostly it's about circuit design and transformers - and the speaker.
    My comment is about classic crunch/distortion, not about metal - that's a different story and imho not even related to tubes at all.

    Well i have tested with my old engl tube head and the current marshall valvestate i have(tubes in preamp, transistor power amp) and using the preamp tubes makes a huge difference. Sounds A LOT better than any of the software sims distortion sounds i have tried(and i have tried several on ios and on desktop), even adding a tubescreamer instead of using software distortion(which sucks in the amp sims) sounds a lot better.

  • It would be most helpful if people commenting on what is right / wrong / the best regarding guitar sounds, posted some examples here of what they are talking about, then we could make our own minds up !

  • I'm curious for those of you running straight into a PA what you are using to monitor yourselves. Back when I was gigging so many places had such limited options on foldback..
    In terms of the OPs question, it seems a lot depends on what's really needed; I.e. Size of the band, size of the venues you're playing, what the rehearsal space is like..

    @fprintf, what I'm taking away from all this discussion is the iPad outputs full range sound - and most guitar combos are not really designed for that. Hence the good results mentioned from going straight to a PA. If you are looking for an amp to use with your iPad, I might recommend looking at a keyboard amp combo. These are are geared toward full range input and output more so than most guitar amps. Or perhaps a small powered PA cabinet..

  • edited February 2017

    @ToMess I don't question your personal preferences, but my comment explicitely excluded 'metal' and that's what Engl is about (afaik)
    Regarding references: I once checked the current Fender/Vox tube models in a YT comparison (proper Studio recordings) and compared them to some recordings of vintage Watkins tube amps.
    The latter may not be very well known, but produced exactly what I'd consider a perfect tube amp sound, in a quality which is indeed hard to emulate. As an example:

    he's discussing technical detail very deeply, sound in his videos is rather at the end
    the tremolo thing is also cool, reminded me a lot on Holderness Johnny

    his other videos are also worth checking