Multiple cues can reference the same audio file, each can have their own volume, pan, and fade settings. Each cue can play back an entire audio file, or a portion. You can delete shows, duplicate them, share them with iTunes file sharing, Air Drop, Dropbox, via email, etc. The free version only allows you to save one show while the Pro license allows you unlimited shows, depending on your storage level. There is a free version and a “Pro” license for $99.99. The app supports WAV, AIFF, AICF, MRA, AAC, MP3, MOV,CAF, 3GP,and MPEG 4 audio, as long as they are not DRM-protected. Each show can have an unlimited number of cues. Within a “Show” you can build a list of cues and play them one at a time, or play multiple clips simultaneously, automatically go from one to another, loop them, trim them, on a cue by cue basis. I use it for songs, but it can just as easily be used for sound FX or any other audio clips. Go Button 3 in an iOS app that works with the iPad, iPhone, and iPod Touch, specifically designed as a “cue” playback system for live shows. It quickly became apparent to me that the iOS Music app was not well suited for someone to perform live with tracks, pausing to talk to the audience between songs, balancing levels, adding fade ins and fade outs, etc. A couple of months ago, I decided that I wanted to get out and perform the songs from my new album live, singing and playing my main keyboard part live with mixes of the tracks from it sans those two elements from an iPad.
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