How Arpeggiator works

A chord is every note at once: one big thing, dense and hard to grab. Arpeggiator plays the notes in sequence instead. Each product is small enough to actually finish, independent enough to live on its own, and built well enough to stand next to the others. The catalog grows one note at a time.

The products do not have to be alike. A synth today, something unrelated next year: the catalog is a set of distinct notes, not variations on one. What holds them together is not a theme but a practice. Each is decomposed from something larger, finished before the next begins, and made to the same standard. Different notes, same hand. That is the harmony.

That is also where the name comes from. In music, an arpeggio takes a chord, all those notes at once, dense and hard to grab, and unrolls it into a line you can follow. Same harmony, made playable. We build software the same way.

Why a burger?

You can eat it in one stacked bite or take it apart and eat the layers one at a time. An arpeggiated burger is the same meal, decomposed, and its layers climb the same diagonal staircase as the notes of an arpeggio.

v1.0.2 · 05efc6c · 2026-06-15