Jordan Rudess, Kevin Chartier (Wizdom Music) and Tobias Miller have teamed up to form a developer Super Group.

The product of this culminated genius is SpaceWiz.

iTunes Description:

SpaceWiz allows you to interact with and control your environment at the highest level of complexity. With the manipulation of your own fingers on the playing surface, together with the technological wonders of the Chaos and Satellite generators, you fabricate particles, which then collide into planets. You can even add the onboard real time synthesizer with its independent set of sounds and parameters to create your sonic masterpiece. Regardless of your desires, this app will reward you with a mind-blowing creation. Sit back, and allow SpaceWiz to guide you on a uniquely woven audio-visual journey. Enjoy the ultimate sonic/visual wallpaper, or get busy and start throwing your own particles around the universe. Try rolling the dice for total randomization and see what happens! For creators who want to play a larger role in their SpaceWiz experience, you also have the opportunity to build your audio/visual world from the void!

What the fuck does any of that mean? The iTunes description goes on about how famous sound designer Richard Devine likes it. Richard is one of my personal heroes, so it must be great at whatever it is doing. If only we knew what that was!

Further on in the description it mentions a synthesis engine that seems to be independent of the whole planets and particles thing. At first I thought this was similar to Sonic Charge's Synplant, a synth whose timbres are developed in a visual way. I don't think that is quite what is going on here. It sounds like the planets and particles are driving some ambient sound engine, and you play music on top of that with the synth engine.

The demo we saw on Tuesday seems to support my hypothesis.

Deeper in the description there is mention of it supporting CoreMIDI for external sound sources, as well as Virtual MIDI. It is definitely Wizdom music's Pro Grade style of functionality and funky.

Let everyone know in the comments if you've thrown $10 at them to find out what it does!

Update: Super-sleuth reader Duke uncovered the best description available for the app. This was hidden on YouTube and available only from the NoiseCreep site. Here Jordan explains the app and shows it off.