Accordo

Accordo icon

Accordo

Charlie Lesoine

AppRecs review analysis

AppRecs rating 3.2. Trustworthiness 86 out of 100. Review manipulation risk 24 out of 100. Based on a review sample analyzed.

★★★☆☆

3.2

AppRecs Rating

Ratings breakdown

5 star

44%

4 star

0%

3 star

11%

2 star

22%

1 star

22%

What to know

Low review manipulation risk

24% review manipulation risk

Credible reviews

86% trustworthiness score from analyzed reviews

About Accordo

Accordo is a retro inspired chord machine in the vein of the Suzuki Omnichord. Select the root note from the keyboard and choose from 8 different chords, then use the strum strip to play the chord just like an autoharp. Includes a built in rhythm machine and adjustable effects like wah and reverb.

Features & Adjustable Settings:

• Use the strum strip to strum chords or use chord buttons for full chords
• Built in rhythm machine with 10 drum patterns
• Combine chords. For example, hold down the "min" and "7th" buttons for a minor 7th chord.
• Separate tone shaping for chord buttons and strum strip.
• Volume balance between chord buttons and strum strip
• Sustain length for strum strip.
• Reverb for both chords and rhythm machine.
• Master volume
• Rhythm volume
• Tempo for rhythm machine
• Swing for rhythm machine
Accordo Screenshots
Screenshot 1Screenshot 2

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Reviews for Accordo

WhatsUpILikeYourHair

No hold function

This is an otherwise lovely app that is missing a key function: a hold, or “organ” mode for chords. Implementing that would make the difference between this being a gimmick and an actually useable instrument. Right now it’s the former, unfortunately.

FeelinDank

Excellent

Drums sound like your playing your great-grandmother’s 1980’s home organ (my experience being a Lowrey M-375 Parade organ). Separate reverb mix knobs for chord section and drums gives that Beach House feel. The underlying tones are pretty similar to the basic saw/square wave tones of Reverb Machine’s RM-20 (or better yet, the original Yamaha PS-20 (or PS-30)). Plenty of tone-shaping capabilities to change the chord section and the solo sections. And YES you can smoothly go between a major chord and a minor chord (and a metric crap-ton of other chords) ...it’s all in how you “press” and choose to “release” your fingers from the chording buttons. I really like that the solo key-buttons change notes to the chords that are being played (allows you to hit more correct notes more often than not). But if you want wrong notes just record the chords and then record your solo part on another track in the DAW or whatever you use.

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