

Install Anytune for basic sound quality and features. Use Anytune to learn to play, transcribe and practice songs by slowing down the tempo, adjusting the pitch, repeating loops, setting marks, and sharing comments using your favorite tracks!Ĭheck out ReFrame - Audio Isolation - /reframe IMHO IT Might be the single best contribution to this forum yet.Slow down music, choose the perfect pitch, and learn to play by ear!ĪNYTUNE™ is the ultimate music practice app for singers, dancers and musicians of all kinds. Many many thanks to & for helping me get to this point. Couple that with multitasking both apps and the world is your oyster. I understand there might be other reasons why People would want a pitch shift pedal but If pitch sync is the need then AnyTunes is a viable solution. Additionally I can manage tonality and effects with the Spark app on the fly.
Anytune ipod how to#
It took me a bit to recalibrate my brain on what a backing track was but both guys were very helpful.Īs a result I bought AnyTunes Pro+ last night, checked out how to multitask apps on my iPad and can now play a song from my library through the Spark and if the pitch is off Anytune has a pitch shift feature which makes pitch sync a breeze.

Much credit to for sparking (ugh.sorry) interest in AnyTunes in his “Matching presets for my favorite songs” thread.

Anytune ipod Bluetooth#
I'm sure that PG's customer support is being bombarded with requests for new pedals - so we all need to be sure to submit support tickets with our suggestions, mentioning real-world pedals we'd love to see you looked into running AnyTunePro+ as your Bluetooth music player? I was just turned onto this iOS app for my iPad by and I see that DH contributed earlier in the thread but didn’t mention his discovery of being able to run both the Spark (Control) app AND AnyTune Pro+ simultaneously by multi tasking them on his iPad. Not really a looper but kind of like a very limited looper. I used to have a pedal that could do that but I can't remember the make/model (it was over 30 years ago). There is a marvelous recording by Paul Horn playing flute in the Taj Mahal where the echo is enormously long so that he was able to harmonize with the echo of phrases he had previously played. Another pedal people might want (I know I do) is a pedal with a longer delay than currently in any of the delay pedals that I've tried so far. But an octave divider would be nice if it would allow the conversion of the sound an octave lower or higher by itself and also the ability to add an octave lower and/or octave higher to the original pitch so that we could play in octaves with ourselves without needing to spend years practicing the fingering necessary to do it without the help of a pedal. I think of pitch-shifters as pedals which allow slight changes in pitch. I don't know if an octave divider would be considered a pitch-shifter. In addition to a pitch shifter, several people have mentioned a pedal like a mu-tron, others want a looper, others (probably most Spark owners) would love either a better noise gate or multiple noise gates to choose among.

Given the large number of pedal types which aren't included in the Spark (yet) it would be fascinating to learn what the discussions were about what they should include and how they should be implemented.
