![]() ![]() When it comes to DAW integration, Loopcloud is superior. Splice has many tags and search features, allowing you to find the samples you are looking for more easily. This is mainly because Loopcloud has more features, making the app and the website a bit more complex. I find Splice’s interface more intuitive and easier to navigate through. Splice has more tags and more search filters, making things smoother. You can search sounds using a comprehensive list of tags ranging from one-shots/loops to tones, genres, and even length. Splice and Loopcloud’s websites are very similar. Both services let you browse through their entire catalogs without paying, which means you’ll never be forced to waste money on sounds and presets you don’t even need. Plus, Loopcloud offers more affordable subscription plans.įundamentally, Splice and Loopcloud allow you to browse through a massive cloud-based sample library and download only the sounds you want. So, in the end, Splice is more intuitive and easier to use with slightly better-quality samples, while Loopcloud gives you more control over your sound with more features. Both platforms integrated AI into their workflow, but with Splice, AI also works for creating tracks, not only for finding the right sample. Interface-wise, Splice is more intuitive, and Loopcloud is a bit more complex. In terms of sample quality, Splice is one step ahead, but in quantity, Loopcloud is better. But you don’t get the sound manipulation features you get with Loopcloud. Again, you can listen to the samples before purchasing match the tempo and key of the loops to your project to see if it fit well. ![]() With Splice Bridge, you get the same online library version but in an app. Even some DAWs like Ableton Live do not offer that feature as it does not support automatic pitch-shifted sample previews. With the Loopcloud app, you can preview and edit your samples, and the app automatically links the samples to your project’s tempo and tone. While both libraries offer apps with DAW integration, Loopcloud has better software with more features. However, I have to recognize that Loopcloud’s sample-previewing features and integrated VSTs are much better than Splice’s all-too-humble Bridge app. Before knowing whether you should go for Splice or Loopcloud, you should ask yourself: what kind of producer am I?Īs someone accustomed to editing samples in Ableton Live, I find Splice to be very simple and easy to integrate into my workflow. Some dilemmas cannot be solved with a straight ‘yes’ or ‘no’ answer.
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