Peter Vogel CMI is a music app developed by Peter Vogel Instruments Pty. The last update, v2.40, released on March 03, 2021, and it’s rated 2.81 out of 5 based on the latest 32 reviews. Peter Vogel CMI costs $9.99 and requires iOS 12.1+ and Android 11.1 or newer to download.
Video: Peter Vogel CMI Overview
Description
Travel back in time to the dawn of electronic music with this strange retro app – a MIDI player preloaded with 500+ legendary CMI (Computer Musical Instrument) sounds.
Want to enjoy Peter Vogel CMI on your desktop? Download the latest APK (2.40, 83 MB) or choose your preferred version, and follow our Bluestacks emulator guide for easy installation on Windows or macOS. For any assistance with downloading or installing APK files, feel free to visit our forums!
User Reviews and Ratings
★★★★★Legendary
I mean I’ve gotta admit, this thing right here is the sound of the 80’s. Best synthesizer available on the App Store! I do plan on buying the pro version until I get enough money. Though I do think that $49.99 (Basically $50) is a lot just for one app, but y’know, the CMI III was literally used to create a whole entire soundtrack for a movie, (Terminator II: Judgment Day), so I guess it gets a pass. Overall, this app is very amazing and I enjoy it. Thank you.
★★★★☆Thank you
Thank you for making the Fairlight compatible with iOS 14. I have missed it greatly ❤️
★★☆☆☆CMI Review
Eight years later and the full version is still $50US plus tax in 2021. I guess dropping the full version from $50 to $20 now will not boost sales? I ended up moving to Nanostudio 2 and 3 IAPs. If you want a 2020 app that can do pretty much the same.
★★★★☆Is this app still alive
I love this thing
As we are in 2024
It is crashing on me, not even getting close to "booting" up. This thing is genius, I hope it lives on
★★★★☆Beloved, with caveats
Good, but as of Pro 2.4.3, on an iPad Pro running ipados 18, intel chip, it does not allow me to change the names of individual songs, and the play buttons in the sample pane shrink unexpectedly, rendering them near impossible to tap or press. I love the idea of this, and want to use it to spur some creativity, but there are just a couple of roadblocks along the way.