Skip to main content

10 apps to help you produce your next album on your phone

[ad_1]


In the music industry of even 10 years ago, it was rare to produce an entire album outside of the studio. The launch of GarageBand 6 in 2010 changed that, ushering in a new type of musician: the bedroom producer. Home studios quickly popularized a do-it-yourself approach to music production. Thanks to advances in mobile technology, these bedroom producers are now shifting from laptops and PCs to smartphones. Whether you're just starting out or you're a seasoned pro, making music on your smartphone might seem like a sweet (and rewarding) deal—but it's no easy feat to figure out which apps will be right for you. Below, we collected a few of our favorites to turn your noodlings into the next big hit.


Voice recorders



When inspiration strikes—whether you're lucid dreaming or awake—you need to be ready to hit record and lay down a riff. These voice recorder apps should do the trick. Just remember to factor in background noise and your smartphone's speaker quality, volume levels, and storage capabilities before you start a session.


VoiceRecorder & Audio Editor

  • Operating system: iOS

  • Who this is for: Beginning to advanced musicians and producers

  • Cost: Free

This voice recorder app is a great alternative to the default Voice Memo app that comes with your iPhone. Cassette enthusiasts will love how each new recording appears in the app interface as its own tape. The ability to export your files in a variety of formats beyond .mp4 is also a nice touch. On the downside, the latest version's social sharing ability is a little wonky, and because each recording takes up a lot of room, you'll need ample storage space on your iPhone.


  • Operating system: Android

  • Who this is for: Beginning to advanced musicians and producers

  • Cost: Free

Unlike iOS devices, Android phones do not come with a built-in voice recorder app. The worst, I know. That means Easy Voice Recorder will be your new best friend. Record high-quality PCM and MP4 audio files to save space. And if you're feeling particularly narcissistic, you can even set your tunes as your ringtone. While the free version of this app has annoying advertisements, you can pay $4 to go ad-free.


Digital Audio Workstations



If you've ever dreamed of having instant access to any musical instrument known to humankind, you need a solid Digital Audio Workstation, or DAW. This virtual musical playground contains powerful software that replicates all the best parts of a professional recording studio, from microphones to audio mixers to trombones. Best of all, it fits on your PC, laptop...or smartphone.


  • Operating system: iOS

  • Who this is for: Beginning to advanced musicians and producers

  • Cost: Free—it's an iOS essential app.

Since 2010, GarageBand has been the entry point for bedroom producers of all stripes, and for good reason: It's the easiest way to record multiple tracks (of vocals or any instrument) on any device. If you're already familiar with the desktop version, translating your know-how to the mobile app is a cinch. To get started, simply press the "+" button, choose the type of song or instrument you'd like to record, and you're off. More seasoned producers can import locally-stored files directly into the app, then chop n' screw 'em, add filters, or manipulate them in any other way. Unfortunately, the interface can look a little jarring at first, because you have to continuously swipe between the workspace and recording screens to get anything done. However, once you get the hang of it, you'll be making masterpieces in no time.


Better known as Fruity Loops, FL Studio is the DAW of choice for hip-hop producers and DJs looking to go beyond GarageBand. You can expect more advanced features, such as high-quality samples and synthesizers; an advanced FX panel complete with flangers, compressors, low- and high-band pass filters; and even an advanced step sequencer for fast and accurate beat programming. However, everything comes with a price, and for features like these, you'll have to pay up to $16.


Beats, bleeps, and bloops



From dancey beats to otherworldly bleeps, these apps create a wide range of sounds you can manipulate to create your own music. Use them to become an audio pro without touching an instrument.


  • Operating system: iOS

  • Who this is for: Beginning to advanced musicians and producers

  • Cost: The free version of the app comes with 20 different virtual instruments, but for varying payments, you can download more than 200 additional instruments from the Beatwave store.

As a Beatwave devotee, I consider this app the most creative way to make beats that are uniquely your own. Open it, choose the set of sounds you'd like to work with, and start drawing patterns in the provided grids. It's quite literally musical finger painting! More advanced producers will love that you can mimic multi-track recording by layering multiple grids together and adding different effects to each piece of your opus. While the app has yet to be updated for iOS 11, a faster, more responsive update is hopefully in the works.


  • Operating system: iOS

  • Who this is for: Beginning to advanced musicians and producers

  • Cost: Free

This app's interface will delight fans of Reason—Propellerhead's popular Digital Audio Workstation. And you don't have to be familiar with Reason to play with Figure. Everyone from beginners to more advanced producers will love how simply you can adjust the circular modules (a cheeky reference to the Circle of Fifths) to create truly mesmerizing beats. And musical savants will appreciate that you can tune your creations to any key and adjust the tempo to any BPM. That said, bugs can be an issue: The developers seem to focus more on the app's social sharing aspect (yes, you can upload your creations to a social network of sorts) than on improving its performance and warding off crashes.


  • Operating systems: iOS and Android

  • Who this is for: Beginning to advanced musicians and producers.

  • Cost: $9.99 on iOS and Android.

The Kaossilator is one of the most innovative pieces of music hardware to hit the market in the past decade. This app completely replicates the best parts of Korg's freely playable synth, putting a nearly $300 synthesizer in the palm of your hand! Like Beatwave, you can play different sounds simply by stroking, tapping, or rubbing the app's XY Axis. You can even turn your "musical finger paintings" into loops that you can then "DJ" in real-time. Oh, and it features stunning visual effects that move along with the performance—completely in sync. You'd be hard-pressed to find anything wrong with this app, but some people just can't be pleased. According to some iTunes reviewers, the app interface makes it hard to "consistently hit on a specific note or pitch" during live performances. Other reviewers crave the ability to export tracks as MIDI files, so they can work with them in their digital audio workstations on a laptop or PC.


  • Operating system: iOS

  • Who this is for: Intermediate to advanced musicians and producers

  • Cost: $5.99 on iOS

Moog put the synthesizer on the map, paving the way for electronic music to be the force it is today. For many, a Moog synthesizer is the gateway to more advanced music production techniques. Let's face it, there's something completely magical about that warm, thick Moog sound. Filtatron takes the best part of a Moog—the Moog Ladder Filter—and allows you to import and record any sound into the app and give it the "Moog treatment." Need more wobbles? Filtatron can do that. Craving a sawtooth or square wave? It can do that too. In the con column, you'll need to get used to working the virtual knobs in the app, because they can be a little tricky to turn, especially if you've got larger fingers.


Improve your instrument playing



Learning how to master guitar, piano, or the basics of composition? These apps will be the perfect companion as you practice.


If you're looking to get your start as a songwriter, then this is the app for you. Enter a two-bar riff into the app using the three available "starter notes," and Chordana will automatically generate some ideas to help you kickstart that next big hit. You can also go even more automatic by selecting your music genre, "range of melody motion," and "emotional tension." Then Chordana will write an entire song that you can edit to make your own. Although you can also whistle a riff into the app, this function is not completely fool-proof, so your melodies may be off by a note or two. But you can always edit them in the app to get them just right.


Think of this as your chord encyclopedia. You can search for chords in any scale, both for guitar and piano, and you can learn how to build any chord in any inversion. Our commerce editor Billy Cadden particularly loves that you can "strum" on your screen, so you can actually hear what you're playing. That said, with great power comes greater anxiety: Because it offers so many options, the app could be a little overwhelming for beginning guitarists and pianists.




[ad_2]

Written By Mallory Johns

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Ice technicians are the secret stars of the Winter Olympics

[ad_1] The emphasis of this year's two-week-long Winter Olympic Games has been placed squarely on the Olympians themselves. After all, the stated purpose of the international competition is to bring together the world’s greatest athletes in a nail-biting competition across fifteen different winter sports. But before the curlers, skiers, and skaters even arrived in Pyeongchang, South Korea, the Olympians of the ice technician world were already a few weeks deep in a competition of their own. Mark Callan of the World Curling Federation and Markus Aschauer of the International Bobsleigh and Skeleton Federation both say they’re hoping to make the best ice the Winter Olympics have ever seen. To transform the barren concrete jungle of existing tracks and arenas into an ice- and snow-covered wonderland is an enormous undertaking. And it takes a keen understanding of the physics and chemistry that keeps frozen precipitation pristine. Curling Callan has been making and maintaining ic...

How to avoid the mid-movie bathroom break

[ad_1] Long movies and the urge to pee have been linked since the early days of cinema. Sixty-three years before Avengers: Endgame and its three-hour runtime, moviegoers settled in for nearly four hours of The Ten Commandments . “There will be an intermission,” director Cecil B. DeMille announced during the movie’s introduction. And audiences’ bladders were relieved. On average, movies aren’t getting longer, but they also don’t come with a predetermined bathroom break. That means when nature calls, you’ve got to either sit in growing discomfort or gamble on the best time to run to the restroom. But it doesn’t have to be this way, and for most people, setting your body to “do not disturb” is fairly simple. Go before the show The first piece of advice is also the easiest: pee before the movie starts. Generally, healthy adults urinate every 3-4 hours, so the longer a movie runs, the more urgent it becomes to reset your internal p...

Charted: Here's how much your food waste hurts the environment

[ad_1] Our species is pretty good at wasting food. Some we discard at the farm for being undersized or oddly shaped. Others we allow to decay in their shipping containers, thrown away before they even reach shelves. We leave even more foodstuffs wasting away in grocery stores, often by letting it sit there until it reaches its sell-by date. As consumers, we don’t have much control over most of the process that brings our food to the grocery store, but we do have control over how much food we personally waste. Let's face it: We’ve all found liquified lettuce in our veggie drawers. Don't fret. It's arguably impossible to consume 100 percent of the food we buy. But a healthy reminder of the effect food waste has on the environment might help us all to be more conscious of the amount of food we eat—and don't eat. Consumer food waste varies extensively depending on the area. In South and Southeast Asia, the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) estimates that only around ...