Developer Tim Boldstad has announced that Dingsaller -a workspace for creating algorithmic compositions on the iPad – is now available (App Store link).
Dingsaller lets you “patch together a complex graph of music generating nodes, synths, and effects and control them with a touch.”
Key Features:
- Synths and Sampler Instruments
- Digital Effects
- Pattern Sequencer
- Random Note Generators
- Touch and Tilt Controllers
- Recording
Boldstad says that MIDI support is “coming soon”.
Dingsaller is currently US $2.99.
If you’ve tried Dingsaller, let us know what you think of it!
Note Nodes
- Doubler
- Random
- Pitch Shift
- Keyboard
- Pattern
- Note Filter
- FlipFlop
Control Nodes
- XY-Pad
- Tilt
- Slider Control
Instrument Nodes
- WaveSynth
- DualWave
- SimpleSampler
Effect Nodes
- Resonant
- Chorus
- MultiTap Delay
Yet another app that sounds like Comodore 64…
Rubbish I'm afraid.
oh my.
that does not sound too good at all.
perhaps i am becoming spoiled?
In my book a commodore 64 sound is a good thing!
Well, first of I don't think a C64 sounds that bad 🙂
But still, I wonder if this demo isn't more about demonstrating the possibilities than the sound qualities. Sure he does some filtering and such, but isn't this more about the real time changing of the sound and all ?
The article mentions synths, so I'm sure there are more sounds besides this available. The fact that he never changed much of the sound (type for example) makes me wonder if this was really what this demo was aiming at.
I wish it sounded like a C64
Apple store suck,android is the future…i want for my samsung corby