New iPad Sequencer, Latch, Designed For Ambient Music

Seqsual shared this preview for sqsl Latch, described as a conceptual MIDI controller and sequencer, designed for working with drone, textural or soundscape synthesizer patches.

Latch takes a uniqe approach to MIDI control and latches notes. When you touch one of the pads, the note is activated and held on until new touch on the same pad is registered. The left slider controls the velocity of note to be activated.

Latch can send out MIDI notes, pitch bend and CC values.

There are 16 groups split into 2 banks (a, b, c, … p). Each group has an assignable MIDI channel, color and 8 Continuous Controllers (CC).

Every group also has a looper that records note state changes. Order and velocity of recorded notes is automatically shuffled after loop restarts to create variety. This function can be disabled by activating the group’s LOCK button. Loop playback speed is also adjustable (CLOCK parameter).

Group parameters (CC values, pitch bend, CLOCK and RATE) can be adjusted using sliders or modulated by internal randomizer, with adjustable range (RANGE parameter) and speed (LAG control – left-most slider).

LAG can be applied to parameter changes. When a new value is selected, the change does not happen immediately, but the value is transitioned to smoothly, based on the LAG time (left-most slider).

Setup setting (CC numbers, channels, colors, scale, root and MIDI output) are saved and recalled when app is restarted. Loops are not saved.

Note: Latch is a sequencer/MIDI controller and does not create sound on its own. It generates MIDI messages which can be used to control software and hardware synthesizers.

The developers also note that Latch was designed for full-size iPads and it is not recommended for iPad Mini users.

Pricing and Availability:

sqsl Latch is available now for $19.99 USD.

10 thoughts on “New iPad Sequencer, Latch, Designed For Ambient Music

    1. Background mode on an iPad means an app keeps running and doing its thing while it is minimized and a different app is visible on screen. Some apps can do this, this one apparently not. As for the samples, it is a MIDI sequencer that only outputs note information.

  1. Background mode is pretty much a configuration option for the developer so silly that they’ve omitted that.

    But not a great demo either, just random sounds played asynchronously.

    I’ll go back to programming my MiniFreak 😉

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