Music is patterns.
PhaseCanon is a small machine for bending those patterns without breaking them.
It listens to what you play. Then it repeats it — shifted, stretched, reversed, layered, and mathematically locked into key.
A simple phrase becomes motion. A chord becomes architecture. A loop becomes something that feels like it was planned.
Sometimes it was. Sometimes it wasn’t.
Music is structure fighting chaos.
Arp Stacker lets the chaos win — just enough.
Three voices run free, each stepping through its own chord at its own speed, feeding a constantly shifting pool of notes to a fourth voice that fires on a locked grid. The rhythm stays put. The notes never quite repeat.
The result sounds planned. It wasn’t. That’s the point.
Rhythm is a conversation.
EnTrain lets your drummer do the talking.
It listens to the energy of a live drum kit or drum machine and uses it to drive a probabilistic rhythm generator.
The drummer controls the dynamics. You hold the chords. EnTrain builds the sequence between them.
The output is split across four independent voices. It is not a loop player. Nothing repeats the same way twice. The rhythm breathes with the performance.