Music

Artiphon puts music creation in the palm of your hand

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The Orba is described as a portable synthesizer, looper, and MIDI controller that lets anyone make music immediately
Artiphon
To the top of the Orba are eight touch-enabled pads that register gestures such as tapping and sliding
Artiphon
Each of the eight touchpads up top has a multi-colored LED built in
Artiphon
The Orba is small, portable and powerful
Artiphon
The Orba is described as a portable synthesizer, looper, and MIDI controller that lets anyone make music immediately
Artiphon
Artiphon has developed a mobile app for sound tweaking, file exporting and song sharing
Artiphon
The Orba can be played using one hand or two
Artiphon
Users switch between four modes to build a song
Artiphon
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Artiphon first came to our attention in 2012/13 with a strange-looking digital instrument called the Instrument 1 that leveraged the processing power of a docked iPhone to create music. Now the team is back with a handheld synthesizer called Orba.

The last time we checked in with Artiphon, the company had just redesigned the Instrument 1 to give it a different look and to ditch the docked iPhone, and launched on Kickstarter to fund production. Kickstarter is now the platform of choice for the Orba – a portable synthesizer, looper and MIDI controller about the size of half an orange.

The Orba is small, portable and powerful
Artiphon

"Its minimalist design resembles a cross between a gaming controller and half an orange, and its feather-touch sensitivity translates gestures from fingers and hands directly into music," said Artiphon in a press release. "Orba introduces a new and fun way to make music anywhere, even if you’ve never played an instrument before."

The Orba is described as a band in your hand by the Artiphon team, and comes with cooked-in sounds and has Drum, Bass, Chord and Lead modes which can be layered to create a song with the built-in looper. Eight capacitive touchpads can register gestures such as tapping, sliding and vibrato. And motion sensors inside trigger effects when a player waves, tilts or shakes the device.

Users switch between four modes to build a song
Artiphon

The battery-powered handheld music machine has a built-in speaker, so players can create rhythms and beats wherever and whenever the mood grabs them, but it also connects to mobile devices and computers over Bluetooth MIDI or USB-C. The Orba is compatible with iOS, Mac, Windows and Android operating systems, and will work with "all major recording software including GarageBand, Ableton Live, Logic Pro X, Pro Tools, and FL Studio."

There's also a companion app that allows for instrument/sound tweaking, exporting creations to other music-making apps, or sharing songs to social media.

Kickstarter pledges start at US$79 and, if all goes to plan, shipping is estimated to start in April 2020. The video below has more.

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Source: Artiphon

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