Apple’s Music Memos app lets you feel like a true artist. Music Memos is the newest iOS app coming from Apple in 2016. This easy application is a better form of vocal memo recorder, designed around capturing music inspiration, providing them a minor improvement and delivering the best songs to a specialized music app, like Apple’s proprietary GarageBand and Logic Pro.
The program is totally free and will be available in App Stores later this week. Music Memos begins with a basic record key in the center of the display. The user can press it so the app can start recording, being developed for piano or guitar.
However, people can record anything they want: voice, ukulele or klezmer, even if other instruments could be lacking some innovative features. What occurs next helps the Music Memos to be better than a conventional memo-recording application.
If the user records some piano or guitar, the program processes the sound feedback and tries to split the track demo into segments, in the correct time trademark and then inserts chord labels. People can modify the song any way they want, cutting the start or end to create a loop or overwriting any chord data with their own notes.
But once the song is all arranged, users can activate the amazingly fulfilling auto-accompaniment options, and a bass line or drum track follows along with its beat and chords, just like a real backing band.
The software provides just a series of basic beats, but again seems focused on the strummy and coffee shop audience, but it is also very nice to listen to a professional edition of your song almost immediately.
Song concepts can be marked with various labels, and customers can add feedback or song lines to a notices area for each track. The Music Memo files can be synchronized with iCloud or users can send their songs to GarageBand and Logic Pro to tweak them even further in the more fully functional music applications.
The next phase after Music Memos is represented by GarageBand, the company’s user-friendly song recording or editing software. Integrated in the majority of iOS or OS X gadgets, it requires an iMovie way of recording, losing some of its standard customer connections seen in applications like ProTools and Apple’s Logic Pro.
These were actually copied from real song recording studios, so instead the company has to make a new and hopefully more client-friendly program to record songs. But, this recent app brings some exciting additional functions that allow anyone to begin creating or editing songs, even they have almost no experience at all.
Image source: Wired