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When Moog Music released its excellent app last year, many synthesizer enthusiasts were excited—including me, who awarded it four stars in our PCMag review. However, while Animoog sounds great, it's not really a proper Moog synthesizer emulation. Arturia, venerable purveyors of virtual versions of various Moog models over the years, has now released a 'real' virtual Minimoog—beating Moog itself to the punch. Fortunately, it's a killer synth app—and at just $9.99 (direct), it's also a solid value and a clear Editors' Choice. Concept, Features, and Interface Arturia says iMini is based on the same emulation engine as its much more expensive Mini V plug-in virtual instrument for desktop digital audio workstations. The emulated model in question is a 1971 Minimoog D monosynth—complete with its trademark three oscillators and 24dB-per-octave filter. That said, this is no straight Minimoog emulation either, although unlike Animoog, iMini can totally be one.

Minimoog V Mac Crack App

For starters, there's a switchable polyphonic mode, so you can play several notes at once if you want. There are also built-in chorus and delay effects, plus glide, legato, and even a 'mode' mode (har) that lets you set the keyboard to 26 different scales and modes. Unlike the original Minimoog, of course, iMini comes with preset memory. That's been a given in the synthesizer world for several decades. Remember how some rock bands bought additional Minimoogs with the knobs taped to the exact sound they wanted, since the original didn't have any patch memory? Csr Harmony Bluetooth Software Stack Download Firefox on this page.

Minimoog V Mac Crack App

Arturia iMini comes with hundreds of inspiring preset sounds, plus an arpeggiator with two latch modes, and Animoog-like X and Y on-screen touchpads, which you can access on a separate screen (more on that later). You can also sync the app to external tempo clocks and even use it on top of other iPad apps like Korg iPolySix, or even multiple instances of iMini.

The main screen is a rather well rendered representation of what an actual Minimoog would look like, if it were shoehorned into the confines of an iPad display. Across the top of the home screen are three UI modes: Main, Perform, and FX. The Perform screen lets you adjust four different parameters in real time using two on-screen pads. Tap the little Settings gear icon above each, and a smaller version of the iMini panel pops up letting you assign specific dials to each axis (X or Y) on each pad. Download Far Cry 2 Torent Pc Kickass.

Synchronization, Performance, and Conclusions Tap Connect at the top right corner, and a menu bar will appear offering various synchronization options. A Bluetooth icon called 'WIST' (for Wireless Sync-Start Technology) lets you sync up with other WIST-compatible apps like Korg iPolySix and Propellerhead Figure; the program pops up a list of several dozen, along with iTunes Store links for each.

You can also set the global tempo in beats per minute, activate a MIDI connection using an,, or similar controller, or use Tabletop to stack iMini on top of other iPad app instruments. So that's the basic idea, but how does iMini sound?

If you've been paying attention, you know the iPad is already capable of serious synthesizer goodness. Patches are organized into banks, followed by categories (pads, leads, and so on), and then individual sounds. I immediately went to work checking out the presets and twirling on-screen knobs with abandon.

No matter what I tried, Arturia iMini sounds like the real deal—full, fat, and warm, with smooth pads, cutting leads, and incredibly huge bass sounds. You can fatten the sound further with the fully adjustable chorus and delay effects, and spinning the various on-screen knobs lets you modify the sound in the direct way the Minimoog was famous for. There's no built-in audio or MIDI recorder, though. You'll need to use another app to record what iMini outputs, which is still a bit of a clumsy process, even with iMini's various synchronization methods. But that's more of a global issue with iOS; iMini gives you several options as detailed above, but none are ideal and sometimes result in glitches and lost track recordings. If you want a less expensive app, (for iPad), our previous Editors' Choice for iPad synthesizers, sounds great, although its price went up to $9.99, which is the same as iMini.

Sunrizer sounds excellent and even features a Roland JP-8000-like SuperSaw patch, but Sunrizer is more a digital synthesizer emulation and isn't quite as warm and fat as Arturia iMini. Animoog is more like a Minimoog-for-the-21 st-century, reimagined for the iPad, but at $29.99 it's more expensive than most iPad apps—although still a killer value when compared with the four-digit sums Moog charges for its various actual physical synthesizers these days. Overall, Arturia iMini does exactly what it's supposed to do.

Forty years on, it's a fantastic-sounding recreation of the first popular analog synthesizer and a clear Editors' Choice. Jamie Lendino is the Editor-in-Chief of, and has written for PCMag.com and the print magazine since 2005. Recently, Jamie ran the consumer electronics and mobile teams at PCMag, and before that, he was the Editor-in-Chief of Smart Device Central, PCMag's dedicated smartphone site, for its entire three-year run from 2006 to 2009.

Prior to PCMag, he was a contributing editor for Laptop and mediabistro.com. His writing has also been published in Popular Science, Consumer Reports, Electronic Musician, and Sound and Vision, as well as on CNET. Jamie is also a producer and engineer for interactive media. He has created audio for over 30 games, and is featured in seven books on the game industry. He was a huge Atari fan back in the day and can be easily lured into any room that contains vintage arcade machines.

His new book,, is available now in print and ebook versions.