Gooey just launched Apotheca, which they call a completely new type of LFO multitool. They designed it to make music producers happy through its expressive capabilities and deep modulation options. The thoughtful design brings fresh patterns to life in your music.
Apotheca wants to lead the pack in LFO multitools. The company thought hard about what makes modulation tools great and built what it believes stands above all others. They made sure LFOs work independently from controllers—a must-have feature. It uses an internal matrix that connects with controls, but thanks to a simple drag-and-drop interface, you never see the complex stuff. This separation lets you create endless setups just by clicking your mouse.
The team realized great modulation tools often can't change multiple modulation controls together. They solved this by adding five macro controls that bring a whole new level of playability since one knob can adjust many things at once. Staying true to its multitool nature, every control can affect every other control, including those macro knobs themselves.
Gooey replaced boring direct connections with minimaps in the control paths. This clever change lets you create unusual mappings or customize exactly how controls respond. You can make unique effect transitions instead of the standard ones. They also removed the limitation of single instances tied to single graphs - Apotheca gives you twenty interchangeable inlet effects. Since LFOs can connect to all controls and you can use multiple effect instances, these combined features stand alone in capability.
Apotheca comes packed with twelve LFO graphs, twenty effect inlets, two effect racks, and five macros. It includes over forty filters and thirty phasers/flangers. The drag-and-drop interface makes everything easy to use. You can stack effects and use multiple instances at once. Process your sounds in series or parallel as needed. Every control can be modulated, and LFOs work independently from controls. You can define custom modulation paths and create multidimensional modulation using two dropboxes per control.
Apotheca costs $129.99 and works on Windows and Mac computers. It supports VST3 and Audio Units formats. System requirements include Windows 11, 10, 8, or macOS 10.13 or newer (64-bit only). You also need an Intel or Apple Silicon processor and compatible plugin host software.
Apotheca wants to lead the pack in LFO multitools. The company thought hard about what makes modulation tools great and built what it believes stands above all others. They made sure LFOs work independently from controllers—a must-have feature. It uses an internal matrix that connects with controls, but thanks to a simple drag-and-drop interface, you never see the complex stuff. This separation lets you create endless setups just by clicking your mouse.
The team realized great modulation tools often can't change multiple modulation controls together. They solved this by adding five macro controls that bring a whole new level of playability since one knob can adjust many things at once. Staying true to its multitool nature, every control can affect every other control, including those macro knobs themselves.
Gooey replaced boring direct connections with minimaps in the control paths. This clever change lets you create unusual mappings or customize exactly how controls respond. You can make unique effect transitions instead of the standard ones. They also removed the limitation of single instances tied to single graphs - Apotheca gives you twenty interchangeable inlet effects. Since LFOs can connect to all controls and you can use multiple effect instances, these combined features stand alone in capability.
Apotheca comes packed with twelve LFO graphs, twenty effect inlets, two effect racks, and five macros. It includes over forty filters and thirty phasers/flangers. The drag-and-drop interface makes everything easy to use. You can stack effects and use multiple instances at once. Process your sounds in series or parallel as needed. Every control can be modulated, and LFOs work independently from controls. You can define custom modulation paths and create multidimensional modulation using two dropboxes per control.
Apotheca costs $129.99 and works on Windows and Mac computers. It supports VST3 and Audio Units formats. System requirements include Windows 11, 10, 8, or macOS 10.13 or newer (64-bit only). You also need an Intel or Apple Silicon processor and compatible plugin host software.