AlphaTheta’s newest piece of production gear has arrived: an affordable and portable groovebox, tagged with quite the catchy name to fit its style. The Chordcat is a battery-powered sequencer with 8 channels that lets you sketch out chord progressions and basic arrangements without a laptop – and it’s earmarked at $299.
It’s appealing to any artists looking for a minimal, no-strings tool they can use on the fly to explore harmonic ideas without diving into a DAW or full-sized hardware setup. The build is small (roughly 10×4 inches), flat, and light enough to throw in a backpack. Power comes from six AAs or a USB-C charge.
The Core Workflow
The flagship feature on the Chordcat is (naturally, given the name – we see your sly cat theme) the Chord Cruiser tool – a mode that suggests musically compatible chords as you build progressions. You don’t need to know theory, but the logic behind the suggestions is solid, and you can lock in favorites, assign them to pads, and keep building.
Along with its eight tracks comes a step sequencer (16 steps x 8 pages) and a decent selection of presets: 145 instrument sounds and 16 drum kits. Everything can be arranged and tweaked from the box itself, too – plenty enough to rough out full sketches or live jam ideas.
Chordcat isn’t trying to replace a full DAW or sampler. But it gives you enough structure to develop chord ideas into something usable, fast.
Key Features
- 8-track sequencer with per-track volume/pan
- Chordsets to jumpstart progressions (genre-based or basic theory)
- XY effects pad: arpeggiator, delay, ducker
- Running Direction: lets you flip playback order for creative variation
- Scale/key lock: useful for avoiding clashing notes while jamming
- MIDI I/O + USB-C: works as a chord brain for your external gear
- Chordcat Manager app for exporting/importing patterns
- Ableton Live Lite license included (via registration)
- Battery-powered for up to 5 hours and easy to carry – it weighs just under 1lb.
If your production workflow involves sketching ideas on the go or jamming without a screen, Chordcat looks to be a nice fit to capture the sounds you hear in your head and don’t want to forget too quickly. It can also serve as a harmonic controller for other synths or DAWs via MIDI, which adds value if you already have a hardware setup.
Sure, it’s not a full production brain or a performance groovebox – but it does fill a specific gap: portable, low-effort harmonic sketching. And we’re here for that small-but-mighty appeal.
Give us a shout and tell us what you think – is this bite-sized sequencer worth the $299 USD pricetag? Get the full details on the Chordcat with all its bells and whistles here.