

It gives you a different way to interface with sound and that in itself is important. So Fluxpad is assured a place in my list. Unusual apps and alternative interfaces are very important to me. Now that ROTOR has the tangible controllers with it I’m hoping to get a bit more time to devote to it soon. I like modular apps but ROTOR (and Reactable mobile before it) seem to provide a more accessible route into modular than a lot of other apps in that genre.

I posted on ROTOR and the tangible controllers yesterday, but it also deserves a mention here. I’d like to do a bit more with it myself next year as I think I’ve only barely scratched the surface of what it can do for me. The AC Sabre is an amazing gestural performance tool for the iPhone and hasn’t really had the attention it should have had. I think that Sabre has been a bit overlooked and that’s a shame. Again I find myself coming back to these time and time again. My personal favs are Gadget and iDS-10 though. We’ve had good updates and new apps like ODYSSEi and iWAVESTATION. I can’t help myself but say that I do love Korg’s apps. I’m sure that other people find themselves coming back to the same FX apps over and over, and frekvens is one of those for me. They really let you mangle sound, but in a good way, in a way that doesn’t hurt. I really like two of them though, nils, and frekvens. His apps are amazing, and, pretty much everywhere too. I’m a fan of Mr HumbleTune’s apps, music, and design style. I think that these apps are going to have a really bright future and are going to help users to make things in ways that they hadn’t thought about before. I mentioned it not so long ago here, and I’m hoping to be able to tell you lots more soon enough. Of course the nice chaps from Studio Amplify now have KRFT in beta and I’ve been playing with that recently.
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It’s a great app for making stuff even if you’ve no idea how to make stuff, and I’m all for that. I like Model 15 and I’d really like to do something useful with it, but so far I haven’t. I don’t know if you do that, but I certainly do. Model 15 is here because it’s one of those apps that I keep fiddling with and getting into and then leaving for a bit, then coming back to.

Moog’s Model 15 is on my list for a totally different reason than Auxy is. I also really like the sound packs that they’ve been releasing. I’m not saying that this will always be the case, but for now me and Auxy, we’re good. It works for me and just fits with how I think and work right now. Without a doubt Auxy is an app that I can’t do without, at least not currently anyway. So without further messing around, here are the apps that I used a lot, or found intriguing, or for whatever other reason, mattered. I think that might be more interesting (or maybe not), and it’s certainly easier to do from my perspective. However, what I can tell you is which apps were important to me this year. What works for me as a great app won’t work for other people and vice-versa, so it all seems a little pointless. I always think it’s difficult to tell you which were the best apps in any year, and 2016 is no different at all.
