MCP 2000
MCP 2000 is a browser-based drum machine and sampler that brings classic hardware-style beat-making directly to your web browser. Designed for producers who crave tactile, pad-driven workflows without the complexity of traditional DAWs, this lightweight tool delivers instant groove creation with zero installation required.
Product Highlights
- 16-Pad Sampler Interface: Intuitive drum pad layout with four customizable banks (A, B, C, D) for organizing kits across drums, textures, melodic sounds, and FX
- Real-Time Sound Shaping: Per-pad controls for pitch adjustment, gain staging, and stereo panning to fine-tune your drum mix
- Flexible Playback Modes: Switch between one-shot, gate-loop, and loop modes with reverse functionality for creative sample manipulation
- Built-In Sample Library: Pre-loaded collection of professionally crafted sounds including kicks, snares, hats, toms, percussion, and experimental FX
- MIDI Export: Generate MIDI patterns from your sequences for integration into larger production workflows
- Microphone Recording: Direct audio capture capability to sample external sources on the fly
- Kit Export: Save and share your custom drum kits for consistent sound design across projects
Use Cases
- Quick Beat Sketching: Capture rhythmic ideas instantly during inspiration strikes without booting up heavy production software
- Live Performance: Trigger samples and build loops in real-time for bedroom producers and streamers seeking interactive music-making
- Sample-Based Sound Design: Experiment with pitch-shifting, reversing, and gating techniques to transform basic samples into unique sonic textures
- Educational Exploration: Learn fundamental drum machine concepts and sampling workflows in an accessible, low-barrier environment
- Collaborative Creation: Share kits and sequences with other producers using the browser-based format that works across devices
Target Audience
MCP 2000 serves bedroom producers, beatmakers, and electronic music enthusiasts who value speed and simplicity over feature bloat—particularly those drawn to the aesthetic and workflow of vintage MPC-style hardware but seeking the convenience of modern web-based tools.