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The Dismal State of Android as a Music Production Solution

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The Dismal State of Android as a Music Production Solution

I took the picture above on New Year’s Eve, and I was originally planning to use it as part of a post illustrating how an iPad-centric music system costing under $1000 is capable of producing better music than multi-million dollar studios from just 25-30 years ago. So let’s take a quick look:

My son Christopher is working a DJ mixer which is interfaced to a netbook that is streaming music from MOG; an iPod Touch with some other pre-recorded music; and an iPad.

The iPad is the workhorse of the music system, located just to the left of the iPod Touch and below the netbook. What you will see below the iPad are three USB devices from Korg – a pad controller, mini piano-style keyboard, and slider-based controller. The three controllers chain together through a $20 USB hub also from Korg. All four combined cost less than $200 and are well-built and simple to use. You just plug in and play.

That night Chris was rocking tunes of his own creation using iMS-20, FL Studio, GarageBand, NanoStudio and others. He had only gotten the Korg modules a couple of days earlier, yet they were already integrated into his music studio, making life easier even than using my M-Audio Axiom Pro USB keyboard controller. Everything. Just. Worked.

If you read through my coverage of the Winter NAMM show – which is the premiere forum for new horizons in music technology, you probably noticed a theme. That theme? iPad as the center of an on-the-go music system. For synthesis, recording, DJ work, guitar work, multi-track sound production, effects processing, amp simulations, drum machines, controller interfaces … pretty much everything.

Note that I did NOT say ‘tablets’ … I said iPad. There is a HUGE market for the iPad as a sophisticated music making and recording and control tool. Apple has always had a great focus on music and media at the core of their OS, so the way that the iPad excels at those tasks grows organically out of that focus.

On Android?

A few mediocre little apps, but absolutely NOTHING approaching the level of serious musical production capabilities offered on the iPad.

Why is it that an otherwise robust OS has such an abysmal lack of coverage in this area? Here are a few possible reasons that I think add up to the cause … and the reason we won’t see it solved any time soon:

But perhaps the most depressing reason comes down to this: Google simply does not care.

It is worth calling to mind a comment I read recently: Despite being thought of as a tech company, Google is actually an ad agency.

That might sound harsh, but as the expression goes “follow the money”. Google makes 95% of money from advertising. Google + is not about being a social network but about preventing ad revenue from moving to Facebook or Twitter, something they have reinforced multiple times.

Similarly Android isn’t about being a mobile technology company, but about preventing advertisement money from going elsewhere … and maintaining dominance in search. Therefore those things that help them further ad revenues are priorities, and those things that don’t … aren’t.

Before you think I am pounding on Google – I am not. I admire a company with strong focus and identity. Companies that spend too much time and money trying to be things they are not end up getting crushed under their own weight. Look at Apple in the mid-90s, with eWorld and Pippin and licensed clones and Newton and two OS efforts at once and on and on … they were unable to sustain much of anything in a cohesive fashion and it almost killed them. If Google tries to fully engage in all of these industries they will lose their basic focus and fail.

But in the end what it means to people who are serious about making music on a mobile platform have only one serious platform … Android need not apply.

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