Rytmik Live

Early Access Software
Note: This Early Access software is not complete and may or may not change further. If you are not excited to use this software in its current state, then you should wait to see if it progresses further in development.
About the Game
Rytmik Studio Live
Mode is specially designed for stage performance. Quickly and dynamically change and control song flow, and take full control of effects directly on groups of instruments.
Create – Rehearse – Perform!
Features:
3 Live Pads, each representing 4x4 grid for Song Clips
Controll playback order for each Pad and each grid line.
Change playback order on the fly.
3 adjustable FX controlls for each Pad, each can be assigned to MIDI CC
Each FX controll can be recorded and automated
4 Banks for each Pad containing grid, playback order and automations
Additional Live Instrument - can be played live by PC or MIDI keyboard
User can quickly switch among 4 Live Instruments
2 FX controlls for each Live Instrument, each can be assigned to MIDI CC
Pads and FX controlls can be linked and controlled at once.
Clip Song mode allows to flowlessly switch between Song and Clip editor and allows to edit Clips on the fly while rest of Live setup is playing.
Sharing via Rytmik Cloud – Instantly share Rytmik Live setup with a community of users.
Included several prepared Live Setups
Live Mode is fully integrated into Rytmik Studio Song editor. As building blocks you can use Clips from your previous songs, or even myriad of Clips from thousands of songs shared via Rytmik Cloud.
Each Rytmik Studio Song can include both normal Song and Live Setup and you can instantly switch between them.

Propellerhead Reason Tips & Techniques
  • DAWs >Reason
Rythmik

Screen 1. Rytmik is a simple drum machine with a fixed sample set, but its mixer-style layout makes it lots of fun to play with.

We explore Reason 10.4's new drum machine, Rytmik.

Reason 10.4 arrived in May with little fanfare, despite the inclusion of two new instruments! Rytmik is a simple, eight-track drum sampler, and Monotone is a bass synth. These are the same new instruments that have joined Europa in version 2 of the Reason Compact iOS app, and their primary purpose appears to be to let you open projects you've made on your phone or iPad in Reason desktop. However, they are really useful in their own right; Monotone in particular sounds fantastic with a gloriously 'sticky' filter. So far Propellerheads have not said much about them, and they're undocumented... so let's explore, starting with Rytmik.

Rytmik Method

Rytmik Ultimate with Rytmik Cloud will of course include more features and additions to the popular series to enrich your experience with playing with sounds and creating music on the go. Tags: Application/App Rhythm Casual Data Experimental Live Entertainment Product Utility 2D Pixel Made with Unity. Rytmik is a powerful music station allowing you not only to play with samples and musical instruments but also to mix them together, shape them and create music clips or tracks for your Friday night set-list. Thanks to new features, Rytmik Ultimate takes music creation to a whole new level. Rytmik is an inspiring beat engine that delivers a very rich and unique collection of sounds and beats for massive cinematic percussion, cue scoring, electro, hip hop or industrial. Technically speaking, Rytmik is a 32-step sequencer with up to 24 individual tracks, which gives you great flexibility and variation simply because of this large. Rytmik is a powerful music station allowing you not only to play with samples and musical instruments but also to mix them together, shape them and create music clips or whole songs.

Rytmik Studio is a music creation software based around a beautifully simple, yet wonderfully powerful concept. It’s flexible, instant and fun. Create a basic melody in a few steps, compose a great song in a few minutes, and show your musical flare with a whole range of instruments and effects.

Reason already has drum machine options and general purpose samplers, but there's something to be said for a straightforward, focused drum sampler with a built-in mixer and easy performance controls. Rytmik does not have its own sequencer, it's meant to be played via MIDI, or sequenced from gate sources in the Rack.

Rytmik's interface is pretty easy to understand, with a mixer-like layout along the lines of Roland's TR‑8S. The eight channels each have a volume fader, mute and solo buttons, and sends for Delay and Reverb. Clicking the pads along the bottom triggers the sounds and selects channels for editing in the top half of the panel.

Each channel plays a single sample, and here's the catch: the sample set is fixed, you can't import your own. Each channel does at least have access to all the samples in Rytmik's library so you can, say, load a hi-hat into the Kick channel (although the track name won't change).

When a channel is selected its sample is displayed in the edit area. You can adjust start and end times by dragging the markers within the waveform. All other settings are made from a narrow strip of simple parameter fields below. These include Pan, Pitch and Fade In and Out values that are set as a percentage of the current play range. These linear faders are the closest thing Rytmik has to envelopes.

Accessed from the right of the waveform display, each channel has a simple pair of filters which can be adjusted directly from the graph or from the numeric readout. The filter area also has a Distortion effect.

There's something to be said for a straightforward, focused drum sampler with a built-in mixer and easy performance controls.

Master Effects

Rythmik Lv12-f

The final channel, labelled Master FX, also serves as the master fader for the mixed output. Clicking on the channel selector for this track brings up an editor panel for the Delay, Reverb and master bus compressor. Again, settings are adjusted by clicking on the parameter values, and each section has a single parameter that can be controlled by clicking directly on the graphic display (delay feedback, reverb decay time and compressor threshold).

Screen 2. Rytmik has three built-in effects, plus a distortion and master filter.

For me it's the Master channel that makes Rytmik a fun device. The Reverb and Pitch knobs on the master act as trims for all channels. This can be used for fun breakdowns and transitions, like a lite version of the All control on some Elektron boxes. Turned to the left, the Reverb knob will attenuate the effect on the source channels, but to the right it will actually add reverb to all channels, even if their send is closed.

Finally, the master channel controls a filter which is applied to the mix bus. This follows the fun performance filter convention of low-pass to the left, high-pass to the right.

Rhythmic Lines Definition In Art

Creative Patching

Rytmik has a comprehensive set of patch points on the rear panel, allowing for separate audio outputs, and external gating of all channels. These additions are particularly useful if you're developing an idea from Reason Compact 2. By taking individual outputs you can apply effects and mix the sounds individually in the main mixer.

Screen 3. Patch points help with mixing and replacing sounds from your iOS projects.

The gate outputs are perfect if you want to replace some of the stock sounds you've used in a mobile app project, without spending ages completely swapping out the whole Rytmik with a different drum device. With the sequence already in place you can take the gate out from a specific channel to another device to replace or layer up a sound.

Rythmik Lv12

The info on the back of Rytmik states that using separate outputs breaks internal routing. In other words, if you connect an output channel it will no longer appear in Rytmik's own mix. Note, however, that the sends from a channel remain active so the sounds will still show up in the reverb and decay returns. In most circumstances you wouldn't want this, so you'd need to turn the sends down. The individual outputs also get affected by the master filter.

Reason Compact 2

Screen 4. Reason Compact 2 now has three instruments in its mini-rack.Screen 5. A Reason Compact 2 project opened in Reason has three instruments, with Europa's supported by Chords and Arp Players. If the project had a sequence it will appear as clips in the main Sequencer.The first mobile app to bear the Reason name was, well, a bit disappointing. It was essentially the Europa synth with a simple step sequencer. While Europa is of course amazing, and you could unlock a fair bit of programmability with an in-app purchase, it was a bit of a stretch to call it Reason, even with the 'Compact' qualifier.

Version 2 offers a lot more, with drum and bass tracks provided by the Rytmik and Monotone devices. There's still only one sequence (up to eight bars) in a project, so you can only really capture a single idea, but it's fun and you can develop these on-the-go doodles in Reason proper.

Rhythmic Line

To export a Reason Compact 2 project to Reason, navigate up to the main screen that shows the mini rack. Tap on the menu in the top right and choose Export. Tap on 'Reason 10' and the standard iOS share screen will pop-up. If you're on a Mac you can simply AirDrop to your computer, but you can also send as a message or email, or save to your cloud storage service of choice.