Re: Push Secrets - aka tiny tips
Posted: Thu Apr 18, 2013 12:25 am
Not half as tedious as you, numbnuts!humnumb wrote:panten wrote: Sounds tedious.
Not half as tedious as you, numbnuts!humnumb wrote:panten wrote: Sounds tedious.
YOU'RE tedious. Jesus christ, you give me a fucking headache. Ugh.humnumb wrote:Sounds tedious.panten wrote:I've been giving mine a prefix of _NAME which serves the same purpose of putting them at the top of the list
HA! You beat me to itartpunk wrote:Not half as tedious as you, numbnuts!humnumb wrote:panten wrote: Sounds tedious.
Shit, man. Thank you for this one! That'll keep things live.panten wrote:If in Note Mode and you push and hold Session it acts temporarily. Allowing you to launch clips then release the Session button to jump straight back into Note mode.
AWESOME.If in Note Mode and you push and hold Session it acts temporarily.
Okay, and since Live 9 has session automation, all automation is copied any time you copy a clip in live whether it was created by Push or anything else. Except with push since you are recording directly to clips there is no dragging needed (unless dragging from session to arrangement views). This is a non-point.djadonis206 wrote:The coolest thing about Maschine is once you make a midi file with automation you can drag the midi file into Live sequencer and the automation comes with it.
You may be right that you can't do this directly from Push (I'm not 100% sure), but I'm not aware of a way to do this directly from Maschine either (unless you're talking about having master/slave pads for layering in which case it does take up extra pads). This can easily be done in Live a multitude of different ways though, including:djadonis206 wrote:The other thing I love about Maschine is you can layer drums without having to give up pad space. The drums just stack up on top of one another!
Push can't do any of that...
You can layer sounds via an instrument rack yo...djadonis206 wrote:The coolest thing about Maschine is once you make a midi file with automation you can drag the midi file into Live's sequencer and the automation comes with it. The other thing I love about Maschine is you can layer drums without having to give up pad space. The drums just stack up on top of one another! If you have Maschine you should try and do both of those things
Neither Ableton nor Push can do any of that...I'm so selling my Push controller and Ableton Live license and buy another Maschine controller. Because if one Maschine controller can do way more than Push and Ableton, I bet 2 controllers can do twice as much!!!
You can layer samples on the same pad easily from the Maschine hardware. When you are browsing samples, there is an ADD button that lets you add samples to the same pad. You can layer up to 128 samples per pad in Maschine. It's also easy to remove/replace layered samples from just the hardware.lococobra wrote:I'm not aware of a way to do this directly from Maschine either
Wrong. Nudging notes in Maschine moves in much smaller increments than 128ppq with the grid off. Maschine's internal sequencer resolution is 960 ppq.aioffermann wrote:Know what Maschine CAN'T do? Nudge notes at a ppq greater than 128!
Please post one of your YouTubes detailing how to stack drums and edit the individual samples in the stackhumnumb wrote:You can layer samples on the same pad easily from the Maschine hardware. When you are browsing samples, there is an ADD button that lets you add samples to the same pad. You can layer up to 128 samples per pad in Maschine. It's also easy to remove/replace layered samples from just the hardware.lococobra wrote:I'm not aware of a way to do this directly from Maschine either
Sure didn't sound like that to me. Also on the Native-Instruments forum, this guy called noiserot proclaimed the following:humnumb wrote:Wrong. Nudging notes in Maschine moves in much smaller increments than 128ppq with the grid off. Maschine's internal sequencer resolution is 960 ppq.aioffermann wrote:Know what Maschine CAN'T do? Nudge notes at a ppq greater than 128!
Also saw some other users saying the same thing. I can assure you that nudging notes in Maschine with the grid set to off does not sound like 960 ppq, it sound like 128...noiserot wrote:When nudging or mouse-editing, the resolution is 128ppq when the grid is off.
Maschine's resolution for realtime input with grid off is 960 ppq.
Guess you didn't read the rest of what I said. The part where I talk about this being the wrong place for this discussion and that this is pointless since both Push and Maschine can do this anyways.humnumb wrote:You can layer samples on the same pad easily from the Maschine hardware. When you are browsing samples, there is an ADD button that lets you add samples to the same pad. You can layer up to 128 samples per pad in Maschine. It's also easy to remove/replace layered samples from just the hardware.lococobra wrote:I'm not aware of a way to do this directly from Maschine either
Actually, people have found that you can access at least 480 ppqn positions using the 'swing' knob method (visually) and that nudging with the swing knob in the step mode you get either 27 or 30 positions per space with 128 grid.aioffermann wrote:Sure didn't sound like that to me. Also on the Native-Instruments forum, this guy called noiserot proclaimed the following:humnumb wrote:Wrong. Nudging notes in Maschine moves in much smaller increments than 128ppq with the grid off. Maschine's internal sequencer resolution is 960 ppq.aioffermann wrote:Know what Maschine CAN'T do? Nudge notes at a ppq greater than 128!
Also saw some other users saying the same thing. I can assure you that nudging notes in Maschine with the grid set to off does not sound like 960 ppq, it sound like 128...noiserot wrote:When nudging or mouse-editing, the resolution is 128ppq when the grid is off.
Maschine's resolution for realtime input with grid off is 960 ppq.
http://www.native-instruments.com/forum ... p?t=185200