![]() ![]() ![]() (Logic’s new features actually make sampling the Model 15 really powerful.) Now, if you have a Mac running Big Sur, you can take that same Model 15 instrument and load it on your Mac, then drop it as an AU in Logic Pro, GarageBand, and MainStage. You even fiddle with a bit on your iPhone (or iPod touch) on the toilet chair. (I’m sorry.) So you curl up with your iPad in bed, and say it’s time to actually learn the Model 15. You’re exhausted (by Zoom calls, by front line work, by stress). Let me just come up with – let’s call it a pandemic workflow here. If you do have more than one Apple-thing, this opens up some new possibilities as Big Sur becomes more practical. (Even on the iPhone and iPod touch, it’s usable, too.) That beautiful display is the ultra-pricey Apple one, but even an inexpensive monitor with vertical mode will work really well. The similarity of an iPad to a book is perfect for that personal experience of the synth, too. It’s deep enough for expert modular aficionados, it sounds great, but it’s also – as Moog rightfully claims – a powerful teaching and learning tool if you’re new to modular synthesis. So the Moog Model 15 is already a beautiful thing. But they do cost some money, and you can’t take them into bed with you (not without significant damage to the wallet and mattress, respectively). One Moog modular runs everywhere (nearly) on the current Apple ecosystem, so your patches go gracefully from Big Sur Mac (M1 or Intel) to iPad to iPhone. ![]()
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