Playtime Engineering launched the $199 Blipblox synthesizer about five years ago. It didn’t come anywhere close to toppling the undeniable king of the budget synth market, Korg’s Volcas. Then again, that wasn’t the point. Blipblox isn’t a tiny, cheap keyboard designed to infect synth dads with a bad case of gear acquisition syndrome. It’s a children’s toy—a bulky piece of shiny plastic with the goal of teaching the basics of synthesis.
Now the company has just wrapped up a successful Kickstarter campaign for its second instrument, the Blipblox myTracks. MyTracks basically tries to answer one question: What if an Ableton Push and a Leapfrog toddler laptop had a baby? It’s a stand-alone sampler and groovebox that lets kids create their own songs from start to finish. It tries to simplify things as much as possible while still delivering a decent amount of fun sound mangling.
Editor’s note: The myTracks is still in preorder and will begin shipping later this year. We were granted early access to a preproduction model as the company finishes up the device for estimated delivery in November.
A New Musical Toy
Let’s start by clearing up what the myTracks is not: It’s not a fully-fledged MPC. You can’t chop up samples on it. The pads are not velocity sensitive (or particularly sensitive at all, really). It’s also not a synthesizer. While it has melodic tracks, they’re just single-shot samples that get pitched up and down by playing them back slower or faster. It has a certain lo-fi vibe that can be charming on the right sound, but this is not going to be the device for your kids to learn sound design or finger drumming on.