yep! exactly!
thanks for that
*bookmark*
yep! exactly!
I didn't know that either. Very cool. Cheers mate!Angstrom wrote:There are some things in Ableton Live that I think only three people know about.
Here's one: The rack Hierarchy view, right click the little Rack Overview and receive a menu which will allow you to quickly jump to any instrument, or effect within the rack.
It's very useful when dealing with complex racks, but almost nobody knows about it.
So what obscure Ableton Function do you think most people do not know?
Same!Riggs_df wrote:I didn't know that either. Very cool. Cheers mate!Angstrom wrote:There are some things in Ableton Live that I think only three people know about.
Here's one: The rack Hierarchy view, right click the little Rack Overview and receive a menu which will allow you to quickly jump to any instrument, or effect within the rack.
It's very useful when dealing with complex racks, but almost nobody knows about it.
So what obscure Ableton Function do you think most people do not know?
That's very handy and useful too, but incomplete. It's also not very obscure as it's in the manual . It says:Fanu wrote: When you hold CMD (Mac) and drag a transient, it locks the surrounding transients in place. Very handy, and won't mess up the nearby transient placement.
"As you mouse over transients, temporary “pseudo“ Warp Markers appear. These have the same shape as regular Warp Markers, but they’re gray.
Double-clicking or dragging a pseudo Warp Marker creates an actual Warp Marker or, if there are no Warp Markers later in the clip, changes the tempo for the clip segment. Holding the [CTRL](PC) / [CMD](Mac) modifer while creating a Warp Marker on a transient also creates Warp Markers at the adjacent transients."
Warm thank you, never noticed this feature... big time saverFanu wrote:
When you hold CMD (Mac) and drag a transient, it locks the surrounding transients in place. Very handy, and won't mess up the nearby transient placement.
You may have also missed Press shift to align the peak with the markerHermanus wrote:Warm thank you, never noticed this feature... big time saverFanu wrote:
When you hold CMD (Mac) and drag a transient, it locks the surrounding transients in place. Very handy, and won't mess up the nearby transient placement.