Im somewhere inbetween a hardware and software setup. My background is ITB but I was nevet satisfied with the sound or the bugs and issues you come up with on a PC. I since have moved on to a Analog 4 and Rytm based setup. Along with a Novation BS2, a Korg ER1 and whatever gear I pick up in the future Im quite happy with the sound finally. However, writing and arranging music on the Elektron devices is not the easiest to create finished songs with. The 64 step sequencer is quite limiting for me and trying to expand on this with chains and song mode is not a great solution to someone like me who really needs a more timeline based visual reference for musical events. I need something like multitrack notation or your average daw track view to keep track of everything.

So my current idea is to pick up a Ipad Air 2 and run Cubasis on it. Ive got a compatible soundcard (Steinberg UR44) so writing, arranging and recording should be easy enough. Ill still have to work around some things because the A4 and Rytm dont send midi notes from their sequencer so I’ll have to write longer parts in Cubasis or send pattern change messages from Cubasis to avoid chain and song mode.

This should give me the flexibility of a DAW based setup and the sound and control of hardware with a more streamlined interface than working on a PC.

Someone above me recommended Arturias Spark as an alternative and I think its mostly great also. The virtual analog and physical modelling synthesis is IMO best in class and sounds better than pretty much every other drum synth that will run on Windows. However the software interface could be more streamlined. There are lots of pages to the gui and the hardware just does not have enough knobs or functions to not also have to use your mouse or trackpad with the software. If I didnt have a Rytm I would be almost exclusively using spark for for drum synth duties as it sounds that good but the Rytms analog sounds that much better. I’ll get back into Spark one of these days though. It’s physical modelling is amazing and somehing the Rytm doesn’t do. Both play samples but on the Rytm they run through a filter and VCA so they get that analog touch. Sparks cheap though and the Rytm is almost ridiculously expensive so that does matter a bit. But youll still have to have your computer on to use Spark. I hope they make an ipad version eventually.