Abandoned?
This is a fun, useful app that needs some attention. Alas, like many smaller developers, it seems to be abandoned. To bad, with a little work, this app could have been truly great.
Yes, Genome MIDI Sequencer is completely free and it doesn't have any in-app purchases or subscriptions.
🤔 The Genome MIDI Sequencer app's quality is mixed. Some users are satisfied, while others report issues. Consider reading individual reviews for more context.
Genome MIDI Sequencer is free.
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This is a fun, useful app that needs some attention. Alas, like many smaller developers, it seems to be abandoned. To bad, with a little work, this app could have been truly great.
This is a nice app. But like other apps I've tried, there seems to be on way to change the meter on just a single bar or pattern within a song.I hoped that maybe I was just not finding the right button... To me being able to change the meter of a bar or pattern is almost just as important as everything else they've included in this software.I don't understand why they were would leave that out. It can't be a cost issue. Maybe there's an update or something.
Essential Midi sequencing app hat has all the right features. UI can be more intuitive or a better manual. Biggest problem so far: METRONOME can not be set to all tempos. Right now I NEED 95 BPM and it will not do it. Keeps going back to 94. Can’t get Song Mode to work and play pattern sequences. That’s a problem because I won’t be able to record the work I’ve don’t Please fix for ios11 and iPad Pro then I’ll give 5 stars
As far as iOS sequencers go, Genome has a great piano roll editor and—unlike more expensive apps like modstep and Gadget—global undo/redo and MIDI file export *per clip.* I like using it in AUM as a “quick-sketch” sequencer while I work out songs. The UI is comfortable to work with on a touchscreen, and the sequencer is extraordinarily fully-fully featured (it even supports grooves). The MIDI capabilities are especially good: if things need to move somewhere else, Genome can export songs, parts, or clips as individual MIDI files.
OK, I don’t have a rack of hardware synths—but I like to pretend I do! I have been using this app to sequence virtual synths on my Mac. I mostly use Propellerhead Reason, but also Apple’s Main Stage. Genome MIDI Sequencer (GMS) executes Virtual MIDI on the iPad expertly, but resource limitations of my iPad Air mean I can only get about four synths/instruments running—but GMS has 16 tracks! I can get around this a little by using a multi-instrument app like bs-16i or SampleTank, but they have little flexibility in sound design and control—and GMS is a monster controller. But with Reason on the Mac I can easily get 16 instruments loaded, and with effects on all of them. (So, Reason is my pretend rack of synths.) I like the GMS piano roll editor the best. One can draw in a sequence or record one and edit it expertly. This app does so much so well it is too much to sing all its praises. Please read the description and the manual on the apps web page—it does all that! There are a few things I wish it had, so I’ll list some of them. (1) There is no polymetric capability, meaning each track must have the same time signature. Workaround: for 4 against 5, use 4/4 and make a 5 measure pattern for the 5 beat part. (2) There is no 2/4 time, which would also give one 6/8 (compound time) thanks to the triplet feature. This is a problem with long polymetric sequences as noted in the workaround above—especially with three or more time signatures. Workaround: set the Song mode to 1 step = 1 bar, then you can escape the loop whenever you want. Otherwise, GMS will repeat the patterns until they all finish at the same time. (3) There is no polyrhythmic capability. Workaround: set “time in ticks” and zoom in to 128th notes and meticulously count out your beat divisions—use the Euclidean algorithm to pad the note lengths. It should be close enough. I would like to do sequencing for my Reason projects while away from the Mac, so the following two suggestions would help. (4) Sometimes I have a drum part composed and wish I could switch to another app/drum machine. This can be easy if both apps support General MIDI mapping. But Garage Band is different, and Reason’s Kong is different still. So, I would like to be able to create drum maps. (I guess this also entails a drum editor.) Then, when changing drum sources one would only need select the corresponding drum map. (5) Sometimes I have a note track I wish I could switch to a different synth or other instrument, but
In my search of the app store for a midi sequencer for external hardware this app proves to be the most capable and versital. Most other apps are either too limited to things like single channel or simple step sequencers, or try to be a full production daws with libraries of built in loops and instruments that I have no interest in. This app is perfect for people who want to create actual compositions on multiple peices of external hardware. The 16 tracks of pattern based sequences that can be arranged into songs is an extremely powerful tool for both live performance and studio creation. As far as the UI goes, I found it to be very intuitive and easy to navigate despite a lot of the critisms from others. Of course, a quick reference to the manual is necessary every now and then to understand a button or a setting, but the basic workflow is very easy to understand. tldr: best midi sequencer for external midi gear on the app store. All functionality, no fluff.
This is the least user friendly music app I've ever attempted to use. The documentation didn't help much. All I was looking for was a sequencer that I could use with Audiobus to trigger my iOS synths. Trying to find something simple now that I wasted money on this pretty, but useless (to me, anyway), sequencer.
whoever wrote the tutorial for this thing really dropped the ball and the instructional videos aren't much better.
Unfortunately, I'm pretty disappointed with this app considering its price point. It does have a couple of good features. The synth that comes built in with it sounds pretty good. And I like the idea of being able to highlight a chord on the keyboard, and then punch in the rhythm and it automatically fills in the notes. But it is not very user friendly. Everything is controlled by counterintuitive buttons that have absolutely no labels, and are not adequately explained in the uninformative and awkwardly written owners manual. If there is a way to select notes in the piano roll to edit, quantize, copy, paste, etc., I haven't discovered it. These tasks are easy in other similar apps. Song mode apparently only holds up to 11 measures? No way to make it full screen? Can only loop one section of the song? Not functional at all. Sometimes the song will loop, sometimes it won't. And the inbuilt drum machine is not very great. Also, if you minimize the screen and come back to it, half the time it will have closed your song and you have to open it again.
It is a good sequencer and it supports several types of midi messages. It works well with external gears. The only complain I have, is that the process of selecting and loading a file is very painful and long. Minor but useful improvements: the piano roll could be edited with custom names (e.g. Kick, snare, etc ). This is helpful when sequencing a drum track with an external keyboard. It would be also nice to have a small drum pad in addition to the keyboard.