Wireless controller for TX-6 mixer using Bluetooth, or can use USB cable.
Can control volume and effects for each track, and master volume.
I love this thing. The device, mostly. The app I am also quite fond of.
As a synth, a drum machine, a sampler, a mixer. To sit on my desk, go in my bag, or my pocket. Has seen so much use that the FX buttons are faded. I got a YouTube comment about it being filthy because it was covered in pocket lint. Very flexible with aux out for loopback fx or sends or crazy cable configurations.
Lack of Windows support is annoying. It works, but you get buzzing even in 2ch mode. And latency is pretty high. But overall mostly works.
Also sometimes some clicking in recorded audio, even to USB stick.
And occasional crashes that need a reboot. So if using live you could be out for 10s.
But that has only ever happened after hours of use for me. Happens under heavy load though, which is a concern for risk of losing high interest moments. But, shit happens.
Pairing with TP-7
USB gives multitrack recording and overduubbing. Multitrack editing still takes a little reminder on TP-7 as I don’t do it often enough to remember.
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Make playlists from your Spotify likes, or recently played. Saving to playlists while walking/out is a hassle, so instead I just hit the Like/Favorite button, then can go through a bunch of them later and add to a playlist. Or check ones I liked from a particular week/month if I want to group by time.
Requires access invite, Spotify make you request permission with API keys.
This was inspired by the SC500 portable scratch instrument being out of stock. Originally it used the OP-Z as a MIDI control input, so you could scratch with the tiny little spinny encoders.
Scratch and cut sounds on your phone. Includes drums and samples, you can add audio files or record from your microphone.
I really like the Help overlay. And the draggable window at the top. You can drag either edge, or the number inputs, or edit the numbers directly.
Sound quality still needs work, both the audio glitchiness when scratching, and the recording quality.
Some early small features, like the red tip of the rotating indicator used to touch the red indicator in the main waveform halfway through the rotation, but that was much less flexible for longer sections of audio.