I’ve found myself a fantastic setup that allows me to compose my songs “live” while also easily integrating my rig into the studio.

I have the Digi-Trinity and a Micromonsta2 all feeding audio into a MOTU Ultralite MK5. That’s hooked up to my iPad Air 4 running AUM, with each synth having it’s own channel with necessary FX, as well as having a pattern change controller to get around the PC bug with the boxes. The Elektron boxes are hooked up to the iPad, as well, via USB to send and receive MIDI, and the DN sequences the MM2 directly via MIDI DIN due to groundloop issues with the MM2 and USB. I also have a Faderfox EC4 and UC4 hooked up via USB. The EC4 is used to control various synth parameters across all 4 machines, and the UC4 is for controlling various parameters on the iPad.

As I am currently building a box to house this entire rig, the biggest benefit of the Ultralite, in this case, is the ADAT IO. It has 8 analog inputs, 10 analog outputs, SPDIF IO, and then another 8 IO via ADAT. That means that I can take the entire rig into my studio, plug the ADAT into my Focusrite 18i20, and record all the individual tracks into my DAW, while also integrating the DAW sequencing and automation when I’m finalizing songs.

if I want to completely ignore the computer, the iPad has an insanely robust set of recording and editing tools available, along with FX and synths, to basically fill in any gaps you may have.

I did an entire live set with that rig last summer, and I’ve recorded a few releases using it, as well. It’s really a pretty cool and compact setup that is pretty flexible.

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