i dont really know what to say to that other than as a gear user myself, i find live perfectly capable of holding the quality of my recordings. For me the whole point of DAW software is to be transparent for stuff like that. Any color due to the built in effects or warping in my case has been a good thing and i more and more turn to only using the native tools as i personally think the "ableton sound" they add is great for my sounds most of the time...3phase wrote:nopattern wrote:for what its worth, ive gotten better recordings out of LIVE than any other application i've ever used. its all to do with how it makes me vibe with the rest of my studio, for me ableton is like a nice modern workspace in the computer to compliment my surroundings. visual aesthetics for me are very important to help the mood when creating music and only ableton gives me "that" feeling in the studio
i believe this sound quality debate centers around Ableton so much because of its immediacy of ease of use, meaning a beginner can find their way around the program quickly opposed to more complex DAW software and start making music. These people then realize that what they are making in Live doesn't sound as good as the records they listen to and blame the software. Ableton is just a canvas, nothing more...
the sound quality debates are inevitably linked to the fact that people are forgetting about the recording process in music. most likely alot of them being ableton users trying to make dance music on their laptop with all virtual synths/sounds and wondering why it sounds flat compared to other stuff. No amount of mastering or processing will give you the sound of a good recording. I'm all about working ITB but the people need to remember where this debate started, the analog vs digital argument was always about recording. now its taken on new meanings like softsynths vs hardware etc...
all the sound quality discussions always include words like "warmth" "punch" "bottom"
the DAW does not do this for you. mic pre's on the other hand can take a sterile digital softsynth and make it sound like he most dripping wet gooey analog synth on the planet. try recording some operator sounds into the mic pre on your audio interface and see if these sound quality issues still exist. record your music
actually from my observation its rather the other way around.. the people you describe are actually very positive about the quality of live while the people with all the analoge gear that are doing records for over 1 - 2 decades now are very negativ about it.. ok.. negativ about the previous versions.. all of them i know havent gave live a real try for years now..
the actual crashing state that really creates a nice feel in the studio and enhances the barflow rather than the workflow dont really helps there...
all the people i have met who complain about sound are the ones using all virtual instruments and rendering all in the computer. they dont know it, but they are really complaining about all DAW software and just happen to be using live because its the only thing they can make music on given the easy learning curve. maybe some of them got another daw and heard a louder output from pan law and automatically thought it sounded so much better. 99% of the time they say that based on hearing more tight low end due to the width and volume of the pan law, but of course they can actually make a track in the other DAW cause they dont know how to use it so the comparison is off of one vst plugin. the problem is what they really need to be doing is using the computer like an instrument and recording the parts through the preamps and focus on making good recording. I believe digital instruments are every bit as good as analog but i still like both... However pressing render on an all virtual ITB track out of any DAW where nothing has been actually recorded and the result is something i personally would never listen to. All the technology we have is great but rendering a track in a computer will never replace a well made recording. On the flip side to that, technology is so good now that even a pre on an maudio is probably capable of some mind bending results
the point was that