Wow, some great ideas on warping there, some I'd never considered!
There's a metronome in Live???
You live and learn!
I quite like the idea of it but it seems way below "putting a record on and arsing about with a mixer" in the gratification stakes.
I have a macbook and whenever I try to mix two mp3 together in arrange view the cpu load just shoots up and I get crazy clicks and pops. Is it really that demanding on the cpu to play two mp3s at the same time? I've adjusted the buffer size but even on max it's still unusable.
Any ideas?
The biggest disadvantage of using ableton (or traktor) for that matter is that sort of instant arsing about fun. I find it really unintuitive and uninspiring scrolling through folders of mp3s (no matter how they're organised), compared to flicking through a box of 12s and pulling one out with "it's crazy, but it might just work" approach.
I don't understand this at all, you can do tons of stuff you can't do on Technics with Ableton in second, I'm busy with a remix/edit at the mo - you can't do that shit on the fly with wax.
Been familiarizing myself with Ableton this week trying to produce beats. It does seem pretty intuitive on the whole and the tutorials are good. I normally find program tutorials to be a pointless waste of time but in this case I think it's worthwhile spending a few hours working through them. Still got just one question tho: how do you produce syncopations i.e. sounds that span the metric boundaries without it trying to make you input the same sound twice, once before the beat and once on it? I've tried zooming in and out but that doesn't seem to help - it just allows you to input shorter or longer beats. Does that make any sense? Can anyone provide the (no doubt) easy answer? Ta.![]()
i think it's 2 totally different attitudes to material, neither are better than each other, they're just different. It depends whether you want the material to do the talking or let your tweaking/editing make something new.
Personally i spend far too much time behind a computer and don't want to do that when playing/djing live. I'd much rather get in a mess with a load of record sleeves than glumly sitting behind my laptop.
Use Simpler and the little midi keyboard to draw your patterns.
Avoid MP3's, use aiff or wavs because Ableton can't play MP3's - what it actually does is convert (badly) to a cache and then plays them from there - which is pretty close to pointless.
Other tips, turn of everything you don't need, including wireless.
Buffers should be set to 512.
Make sure your disk isn't fragmented.
Get a faster hard disk (7200rpm) and as much ram as possible.
I don't understand this at all, you can do tons of stuff you can't do on Technics with Ableton in second, I'm busy with a remix/edit at the mo - you can't do that shit on the fly with wax.
There's a good talk here from Robert Henke (Ableton / Monolake) mostly about how he uses Live in his live sets, not so much about DJing but it all ties in. Worth watching if you have the time.
http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=5496004795361152922
after rendering out a mix i noticed that one track sounds total shit because ableton can not handle a -15 shift. there must be a way or some tool i can use to slow down the track without losing resolution and then bring it back into ableton? any suggestions greatly appreciated!!!