Always been my favourite DAW on iOS. It is a near enough direct port of the desktop version and so has a lot of features that have been on the wishlist of other iOS DAWs for many years. There are so many great little features it has and so you will be discovering new things it can do months after you start using it.
@MisplacedDevelopment said:
Always been my favourite DAW on iOS. It is a near enough direct port of the desktop version and so has a lot of features that have been on the wishlist of other iOS DAWs for many years. There are so many great little features it has and so you will be discovering new things it can do months after you start using it.
Yeah, projects work both ways. If you have an M1 Mac then a number of AUs will also automatically load in both directions as well. So, for example, a project with Model 15 on iOS will open in both directions with the AU settings preserved.
@MisplacedDevelopment said:
Yeah, projects work both ways. If you have an M1 Mac then a number of AUs will also automatically load in both directions as well. So, for example, a project with Model 15 on iOS will open in both directions with the AU settings preserved.
@MisplacedDevelopment Have you tried the Visual Swift TX/ RX AU audio / midi modules in this DAW would that help get round the effects slot limitation by utilising between tracks I know it works in AUM. Not sure if these modules are still in the Visual Swift app or beta did they get included in the public build. Just a thought. Either that or use Mixbox for some extra effects.
No comping or overdub on audio I am afraid. Punch-in works well though. Being able to record practice tracks directly to an audio track is good, letting you record the live audio from a MIDI instrument track.
Although AU multi-out is not officially part of the feature list, you can do it like this: -multi-out-e-g-digistix-in-multitrackstudio (note, I have not tested this for some time so I do not know if it still works).
MPE recording is there and you can also edit the MPE data. For Animoog you are looking at the same recording limitations as other iOS MIDI recorders (apart from Geert Bevin's excellent MIDI Recorder).
I do recall doing some tests with the Visual Swift modules in MTS but like many other DAWs, MTS does not record the wet signal on an audio track so you can't just drop the audio sender into an audio track FX slot and hit record. You can select Audiobus as an audio input so adding the Visual Swift receiver before MTS in Audiobus would probably work. I would however say that MTS is not happy in general with apps which route audio and MIDI like this and you would be better off using one of the supported options.
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