Is ableton right for me?
Is ableton right for me?
Hi all, first post here so I hope I've posted it in the right place.
I've been watching ableton for a while now and it looks like a most amazing tool. I'm considering buying (have been mucking with the demo for a while) but I'm still unsure whether it is the right tool for me.
I want to make music (electronic). I really really want to make music but I have been saying that for a while now and still never have sat down and dedicated the amount of time it takes. I've got a little hardware box (korg EMX-1) which I want to be able to sync in with what ever I do use as software so that is important.
But if I'm perfectly honest with myself I have to say I mostly make mixes from LPs. I enjoy dance music but I'm not a good live DJ, so I use tools like samplitude to make the session with software (spending time with the mix at a fine detail) and I come up with mixes I could never do live. This involves lots of wave (or mp3) editing, chopping up, resampling, etc and I don't see this as a major feature of ableton. please correct me if I'm wrong.
It seems to me that ableton is a capable audio editor of small samples but not of 8 min audio tracks edited to become 2 hour long sessions.
Can people please tell me if they use ableton for editing of long audio sets and if ableton can do what i want well.
Thanks for any advice you can offer
sp
I've been watching ableton for a while now and it looks like a most amazing tool. I'm considering buying (have been mucking with the demo for a while) but I'm still unsure whether it is the right tool for me.
I want to make music (electronic). I really really want to make music but I have been saying that for a while now and still never have sat down and dedicated the amount of time it takes. I've got a little hardware box (korg EMX-1) which I want to be able to sync in with what ever I do use as software so that is important.
But if I'm perfectly honest with myself I have to say I mostly make mixes from LPs. I enjoy dance music but I'm not a good live DJ, so I use tools like samplitude to make the session with software (spending time with the mix at a fine detail) and I come up with mixes I could never do live. This involves lots of wave (or mp3) editing, chopping up, resampling, etc and I don't see this as a major feature of ableton. please correct me if I'm wrong.
It seems to me that ableton is a capable audio editor of small samples but not of 8 min audio tracks edited to become 2 hour long sessions.
Can people please tell me if they use ableton for editing of long audio sets and if ableton can do what i want well.
Thanks for any advice you can offer
sp
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heavensdaw
- Posts: 1825
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- Location: inbetween the inbetween
Ableton will give you everything need and more!
It's so flexible with audio. The more time that you spend with it, the better it gets..
Hd

It's so flexible with audio. The more time that you spend with it, the better it gets..
Hd
http://soundcloud.com/marcusvandell
http://soundcloud.com/acrossdigital
http://www.myspace.com/theinpsyda
'enjoy what you can while you can'
http://soundcloud.com/acrossdigital
http://www.myspace.com/theinpsyda
'enjoy what you can while you can'
Excellent!
Thanks for the super quick replies. Very happy to have people confirm AL is a good tool for my needs. I guess I have a lot more investigation to do with audio editing.
I should probably go through the tutorials and online clips again because I seem to be missing the audio edit mode. I know you can have a clip in the lower window and change clip start-stop location and other markers but where do you actually edit the audio?
And As I was reading this morning all editing is non-destructive right? So if you want to actually permanently change an audio clip it is best to bounce down right?
Cheers
I should probably go through the tutorials and online clips again because I seem to be missing the audio edit mode. I know you can have a clip in the lower window and change clip start-stop location and other markers but where do you actually edit the audio?
And As I was reading this morning all editing is non-destructive right? So if you want to actually permanently change an audio clip it is best to bounce down right?
Cheers
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djastroboy
- Posts: 616
- Joined: Fri Feb 25, 2005 1:24 pm
- Location: St. Louis
- Contact:
One way to make non-realtime mixes in Live would be to lay them out in the arrangement view and then "render". It's actually a much better system than using a traditional audio editor with cutting and pasting.
You get to set the start and end point and the fades and whatever else you can thing of, and, like you mentioned, do it all non-destructively.
You get to set the start and end point and the fades and whatever else you can thing of, and, like you mentioned, do it all non-destructively.
http://www.andrewford.org
Reverbnation: http://reverbnation.com/andrewford
The Sixty-One: http://thesixtyone.com/andrewford
Reverbnation: http://reverbnation.com/andrewford
The Sixty-One: http://thesixtyone.com/andrewford
Live is super simple to use and gives you the ability to go very complex and deep if you wish creating very complex edits ad . best thing is its ease of use and it makes the whole process of arranging, writing editing music great fun and with many unexpected amazing results.
IN essence ypu can forget about the computer and be creative. its the only daw i use now. Could never go back to an of the others
IN essence ypu can forget about the computer and be creative. its the only daw i use now. Could never go back to an of the others
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SMOOTH_LOVIN_CYCLOPS
- Posts: 60
- Joined: Tue Mar 21, 2006 10:53 pm
- Location: NORF BRINKLER YOW
