This app was mentioned in 28 comments, with an average of 1.93 upvotes
Buy FL Studio Mobile (a steal at $16), discover you are the Mozart of the digital age, go on a wildly successful world tour, burn like a wild fire through cocaine and hookers, die young to preserve your fame forever.
https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.imageline.FLM
Two DAWs you can use to get ideas down: FL Studio Mobile 3, and Stagelight.
If you were running Studio One, you could also install the free Studio One Mobile app for controlling the DAW on your PC from a distance (say in a vocal booth).
FL Studio Mobile: https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.imageline.FLM
Stagelight: https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.openlabs.stagelight
I just bought FL studio mobile just now, because can't be arsed making this work after I upgrade to pie... It seems like a better DAW for mobile. It might not be free, but it seems pretty good at what it does.
An OTG cable will allow you to plug "normal" USB devices into an Android phone. So... depending on how your Yamaha connects to a computer, all you may need to be able to connect it to your phone, is the right OTG cable (aka correct USB connection for your phone). Also, some allow you to charge the phone while adding USB input, some are simpler and you either use your charge port for the OTG or to charge. Difference is generally the cost, but an OTG cable that allows you to charge at the same time shouldn't run you much more than $10-$15 on Amazon.
Do you have a DAW you use now? Do they make a mobile app? FL Studio also has a mobile version, for people who like being consistent between products, and ease of connectivity between the two.
Fl Studio Mobile. It's not free, but it's a good sequencer with synths and drums.
https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.imageline.FLM&hl=en
You sure? I see it here (unless this page is out of date). You may also be able to buy/download it directly from FL's website.
Dude, have fun:
https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.imageline.FLM
This is by far most robust music creation app on android, or maybe mobile as whole. altho it costs good money i fiddle with it every day.
You can create simple beats for fun, but also create pretty good sounding complete songs using this bad boy. Its also still used by some producers as main tool on PC.
FL Studio Mobile seems to be up to your standards, I think you can import your own audio files in there.
Also, you can transfer your mobile .flp projects to the computer version of FL Studio.
Bleh
What other dark themes look like:
Final Cut X http://imgur.com/64DDAEx
Photoshop http://imgur.com/1XXxhfL
DaVinci Resolve http://imgur.com/9dfE5Ke
Unreal Editor http://imgur.com/DdfUchX
The sketches are much better in terms of design than the finished product.
10% of the interface taken up by the mostly-empty header.
Consider the comparative utility of having waveforms, icons, etc. inside clips in Session view, which is a neat idea, but relegating most immediate and useful visual indicator, color, into a small 2 pixel bar on the left side of each clip.
UI is a perpetual battle between Lowest possible clutter/Best possible information...and so the creator's solution is to add a slider. ahahah
Why does the UI look like a $20.00 piece of software made for a tablet:
https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.imageline.FLM
Why does a shitty built-in skin still look cleaner than the proposed redesign:
http://cdm.link/app/uploads/2013/05/live9_discoskin.jpg
>USABILITY >https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Usability > > * More efficient to use—takes less time to accomplish a particular task > > * Easier to learn—operation can be learned by observing the object > > * More satisfying to use
In a lot of cases, the new features that are portrayed (workspaces, tabbed projects, mixer view, automation tickers, better Device Rack) are great. I don't feel like Ableton needs an entire UI revamp to add these things.
This exercise is a Feature Request Wish List packaged up with some shit Photoshop work under the guise of professionalism
> In addition, I have more than twenty years of experience in making and producing electronic music.
Good for you. Hopefully that came into play when you managed to fuck a decent UI into a muddy mess
>Redesign it using my design intuition and skills. Test it to verify everything is going in the right direction.
Did you really.
>It was all about collecting the user feedback on what I’ve done and refining my redesigns upon it.
Haha, no it wasn't. It was self-aggrandizing pat-me-on-my-back ego tripping. Your surveys were biased pieces of shit with leading questions and blatant disregard for criticism/feedback. "Does this feature look helpful?" Yes, most of them do, and even in some cases are presented well, but look bad.
>Some drummers prefer a lot of cymbals, toms, percussive elements, two kick drums, etc. while others like their sets really tight and basic.
Yes, and your "Detail Slider" is akin to scrubbing the Sabian logos off the cymbals rather than showing the engraved mark on the hardware where the drummer would like his crash angle set.
>Does this look cluttered to you?
Probably the most realistic survey question. You then present a "clean" version, which is basically a re-skinned Ableton Live 9 UI. So what the fuck? Who's buying this shit?
Many people use Digital Audio Workstations (DAW’s) such as FL Studio, Ableton Live, and Avid Pro Tools. They can be somewhat tough and pricy to learn but can unlock a world of creative possibilities. If you want to see more people who make beats and so on using these, check out r/edmproduction .
If you want to start smaller, and much cheaper, try GarageBand for IOS or FL Studio Mobile android or IOS.
Many tutorials for each DAW can be found on YouTube.
You should only really consider keyboards, audio interfaces, and so on once you are comfortable with the basics of your DAW. Then, I would recommend brands like Akai and Yamaha.
Eventually if you keep at it you could become really good at it, at which point you can start publishing music.
Good luck!
Edit: Reaper is also a good free-ish DAW that a lot of people use (they ask you for $60 but it’s mainly honor system and you can pay whenever, although you should definitely pay it eventually).
Its called FL Studio Mobile
Just checked on the play store, not compatible with N5X or N7. Probably not compatible with marshmallow for some reason https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.imageline.FLM&hl=en_GB
e hvala ti puno
evo ti link ako ti nesto znaci https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.imageline.FLM
If he used to FL Studio, maybe try the FL studio mobile on Android side? C101PA do supports Android apps.
FL Studio has a mobile version. If you are familiar with FL Studio, this shouldn't be too far from that baseline.
Bandlab has a service... there's software for PC and mobile, social media, some multitracking, as well as a few other tools for making music, and then sharing it with others using the Bandlab service. Or exporting it and using what you make however you want.
If you are into Roland, and Roland's sounds, there's Zenbeats.
N-Track Studio Pro (the free version has some limitations) is another contender. Good ratings, and a couple of poor reviews, but they appear to be on top of their customer satisfaction game... which is something.
Is there a reason a $300 laptop couldn't be pulled out of the budget?
Never used it (GarageBand) before but have you given https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.imageline.FLM a look over?
You can download it from https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.imageline.FLM
I'm going on 4 years producing a podcast. For my show we use Zoom to record the video and audio. This sends a live-stream to YouTube. Then we edit the audio on a Mac in GarageBand. It's not the best editor, but when you have a workflow you stick to it!
Do you mean Podcast or vlogcast?
Soundtrap Anchor Cast Zencastr
I've used Soundtrap and Anchor. They both are fairly competent editors.
Android has a few decent editors like FL Studio Mobile
One of the many video editors on Linux COULD work. I've had limited success with anything that requires heavy processing outside of a code editor. I have a newer 8th CPU Chromebook coming Friday, and can update with tests I do on it.
Online options include WeVideo Flixier Magisto
Android has a few options as well like KineMaster
I've used WeVideo before, and it was less than stellar. Uploading videos takes forever. I'm curious about Flixier. If Adobe Rush ever becomes available I think that will be a good option for Chromebooks.
We don't bother editing the live-stream video, but the audio would be very possible on a Chromebook. (at least from our tests) I think video editing would be a struggle until Adobe Rush comes out.
Same here. Which is why I got this.
https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.imageline.FLM
Now I need a midi keyboard. Phone is too small to play the keys lol.
You might want to check out FL Studio Mobile.
FL has a mobile version for $20 on Google Play