Computer Music

Loopcloud Drum and Play £69.95/£29.95

Two of Loopcloud’s bespoke tools now stand alone as adept beatbuilde­rs and synthetic colour generators respective­ly

- Web pluginbout­ique.com

There are some products that have now become so ubiquitous that it feels like they’ve always been around. Take Loopmaster­s’ gargantuan Loopcloud service for example. With over four million sounds readily available for a monthly subscripti­on, Loopcloud has become a byword for the quickest sample perusal you could wish for. It seems like we’ve been wallowing in its genre-spanning depths for ages, despite the service only launching in 2017.

Two core tools within Loopcloud, included as part of its plugin suite, are Drum and Play. These plugins allow for the crafting of personalis­ed drum machines and kits, as well as playable melodic instrument­s, harnessing the ‘Cloud’s expansive sound universe. Now, this pair of malleable sonic shapers arrive as standalone products, available to purchase outside of a

Loopcloud Subscripti­on. Though both can easily still feed directly into the company’s signature service, they also offer up a way to explore your own sample and loop collection­s in enjoyably fresh new ways.

Loop the loop

Downloadin­g from Plugin Boutique, both plugins come in at a small size, automatica­lly finding their home on your hard drive. Selecting them as an AU within Logic, we first fire up Drum. Drum’s UI is divided between two distinct views, the Main display and the Mixer view. In Main, we’re presented with a 16-pad kit generator, a fine-tuning Sound bar wherein we can manipulate sample tuning, envelope shape, high and low-cut filtering and send effects. At the bottom of the window sits a 16-step, 8-bar chainable sequencer. With this we can lock different evolving beat sections for our track’s arrangemen­t. It’s triggered by your project tempo. There are humanisati­on options galore, such as velocity and roll per step, as well as the ability to nudge timing to add that slightly

“It’s remarkably fluid. In fact, this is one of the most expedient drum sequencers that we’ve ever seen”

wonky real-life quality. It’s remarkably fluid. In fact, this is one of the most expedient drum sequencers we’ve ever seen.

While it was originally designed to allow you to treat Loopcloud’s galaxy of sounds as playable instrument­s, the plugin allows you to assign your own (uploaded) loops to one of its 16 pads. There’s also the option to auto fill all 16 pads with a sample library of your choice – or mix and match sounds from differing packs. The downside is, that you’ll have to upload your samples to Loopcloud first however, which negates its ‘standalone’ USP a little.

On its own terms, Drum is both an agile and ultra fun piece of software to get the hang of. It’s boxed with 1300 one-shot samples, 20 full production kits and 11 starter kits which is more than enough to lose yourself in. The pads are all playable via your launchpad or MIDI Keyboard, with options to launch, sequence or tap-play each sample. While the sequencer’s Generator option is a superb method of quickly building a random rhythmic sequence out of your myriad samples, who knows where it could take you.

Play-ground

It’s a similar tale with Play, sporting a familiar two-tabbed UI which, this time, allows for the mapping, manipulati­on and playing of a bundle of sampled instrument­s. Straight off the bat, we have 300 presets that span a wide gamut of instrument­s and genres. These range from bass, pianos, synths, wind, brass and a whole lot more. Some, such as the top-class Analogue Power Synths 1 – which we use in our tests – are enthrallin­gly satisfying as-is.

But, manipulati­on is the real name of the game, and clicking the Advanced tab allows further digging into the audio carving capabiliti­es. The Mod-wheel assignable performanc­e controls include Time Stretch, Lo-Fi, Tilt, Envelope, Reverb and much more, allowing for the complete overhaulin­g of your starting-point sample. The three-slot effect chain also includes a range of distortion­s and delays. Despite its relative simplicity, Play’s engine is capable of pretty astounding depth, and after a slight adjustment to both reverb size and LFOs increasing, our ‘Warm Synth’ starting patch becomes wholly unrecognis­able.

One of Play’s main intents is exactly that of Drum’s; to get you to experiment with contrastin­g samples from different packs and build your own customised instrument­s. Building oddball playable sample instrument­s has rarely been this much fun, or this rapid.

It never rains…

While our experience was a positive one, we did encounter a handful of download errors when quickly switching samples. There’s also the recurring pressure to sign up for a Loopcloud subscripti­on that’s regularly foisted on users from the outset. While this is understand­able (and blimey, we do recommend you do) it does frustrate a little when the software refuses to play ball if you don’t have the subscripti­ondemandin­g Loopcloud software shell open, despite both of these plugins now being billed as standalone.

That said, the meticulous­ly tagged ocean of sound that Loopcloud provides should really have enticed sample-oriented music producers by now. Unless they’re signed up with one of Loopcloud’s rivals (or are just anti-subscripti­on full stop). For those on the fence, taking a dip into Play and Loop’s easy-to-navigate UI and manipulati­ng its quality samples with broad creative parameters will definitely be an enticement to head cloud-wards.

“On its own terms, Drum is both an agile and ultra fun piece of software to get the hang of”

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 ?? ?? Loopcloud Drum’s 16 pads can be filled with a diverse bunch of one-shots
Loopcloud Drum’s 16 pads can be filled with a diverse bunch of one-shots

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