Post
by mastahlee » Wed Feb 23, 2011 11:03 pm
Ha, what a coincidence. I use an eerily identical system.
I have a DJ template als file with 4 "decks" (channels) with routing setup for my mixer. I create a folder for each genre of music, and create a new als file for each song, labeled "bpm - artist - title". I drop the mp3 into that file, warp it, cut it up into sections (intro, build-up, breakdown, verse, etc), color code the clips by section (all chorus sections are yellow, verse are blue) to make it easier to know where I am by a glance. I even name for first clip as the track name and BPM like you do (I used to just title the column, which used to re-name the column I dropped the song file onto, but that behavior doesn't work on newer versions of live, unfortunately). When DJing, I drop the als files into the slots from the browser to have a nicely warped and sectioned track ready-to-go.
You're right, it does take forever to do this method, but its worth it for the control and flexibility it gives you. I also cannot think of an easier way to do it.
The only differences is that I've created a keyboard macro for opening the browser and giving it keyboard focus, and then individual macros for copying the selected als file to the clipboard, clearing out a channel of any current clips, and pasting the new als file into that channel, then closing the browser (I have a separate macro for each channel).
I also created a M4L patch that automatically triggers the next clip in a channel once it reaches the end of the current clip, so I can tell what section of a song I'm in by looking at the currently playing clip. Also, I made the patch so you can re-arrange the play order of the clips ahead of time, so if I want it to jump from verse 1 to the final chorus or go from the breakdown back to the intro I can set that up on-the-fly and not have to baby-sit the transition (when I'm usually focused on mixing in the next track).
All of this is a decent amount of work, and sometimes I miss the spontaneity of buying a whole bunch of vinyl and mixing with it immediately, but I definitely have to say it gives me a lot more options to make cooler and faster-paced mixes.