Early Preview — Kiwisonic is in early preview. Download is free, purchasing is not yet available.

Documentation

Everything you need to know about using Kiwisonic — from the sequencer and melody editor to drums and guitar tracks.

Sequencer — User Manual

This page covers the four main areas of the Kiwisonic sequencer: the Arrangement, Track List, Melody Editor, and Mixer. It also shows a typical songwriting work

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Drum Editor — User Manual

This page explains how drum tracks work in Kiwisonic. No drumming experience is needed.

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Guitar Feature — User Manual

This page explains how guitar tracks work in Kiwisonic. No guitar experience is needed — all guitar-specific terminology is explained as it appears.

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Arpeggio and Bass Pattern Editor

The Arpeggio/Bass Editor lets you create patterns using chord tones instead of specific notes. Define a pattern like "root, fifth, octave, fifth" and it automat

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Flow Chord Pad

The Flow Chord Pad is the fastest way to build chord progressions in Kiwisonic. It's a 3x3 grid — like the numpad on your keyboard — showing the chords in your

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Guided Melody Editor

The Guided Melody Editor is a simplified alternative to the piano roll for writing melodies. Instead of showing all 88 piano keys, it displays only the notes in

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Lock and Reroll

Lock & Reroll lets you keep the parts of a generated (or manually written) pattern that you like and regenerate only the rest. It works inside every editor — pi

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Phrase Contour Editor

The Phrase Contour Editor lets you draw the shape of a melody — high, low, rising, falling — and generates real notes that follow that shape. You express musica

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String and Pad Sustain Editor

The Sustain Editor is designed for instruments that hold long notes — string ensembles, synth pads, organs, choirs. Instead of placing individual note rectangle

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