Any female Ableton users out there?
I'm a "chick" and I use Ableton. I do it all myself. Nebulae taught me to use Live about 2 years ago, and I've basically taught myself everything since. It is extremely rewarding. I don't get people who use engineers to write music for them and then they put their name on it as having produced it themselves. It has never made any sense to me, but most female DJ's do it. It's not the way for me, I am too much of a control freak..ha!

Kudos go out to the bravery of breaking up this macho bunch here!DJ Etain wrote:I'm a "chick" and I use Ableton. I do it all myself. Nebulae taught me to use Live about 2 years ago, and I've basically taught myself everything since. It is extremely rewarding. I don't get people who use engineers to write music for them and then they put their name on it as having produced it themselves. It has never made any sense to me, but most female DJ's do it. It's not the way for me, I am too much of a control freak..ha!
:D
much appreciated,
Dom
ableton support team
[email protected]
[email protected]
Miss Etain, as a DJ for over 10 years, had fabulous instincts. I just pointed her in the right direction, and she simply took off from there. Some of my most rewarding moments with Live came from watching the light bulbs go on over her head every time she figured out how do realize what she was hearing in her head by using Live.DJ Etain wrote:I'm a "chick" and I use Ableton. I do it all myself. Nebulae taught me to use Live about 2 years ago, and I've basically taught myself everything since. It is extremely rewarding. I don't get people who use engineers to write music for them and then they put their name on it as having produced it themselves. It has never made any sense to me, but most female DJ's do it. It's not the way for me, I am too much of a control freak..ha!
If any of you get the chance to teach people how to use Live well, then DO IT...it's a great experience for both yourself and the person you help.
I'm actually running a workshop for a couple of friends who have started using Live and got pretty lost pretty quickly, later this month... Any tips?nebulae wrote:If any of you get the chance to teach people how to use Live well, then DO IT...it's a great experience for both yourself and the person you help.
I'd say do the following:ollyb303 wrote:I'm actually running a workshop for a couple of friends who have started using Live and got pretty lost pretty quickly, later this month... Any tips?nebulae wrote:If any of you get the chance to teach people how to use Live well, then DO IT...it's a great experience for both yourself and the person you help.
1. Be strict about vocabulary. Specifically, make them memorize what Session, Arrange, Clip means, and what the bottom pane tells you when you view the Properties of each. Always ask them which view they are in, and what the bottom pane is reflecting at any given moment.
2. Then approach it from a workflow perspective...what do you want to do? If it's drums programming, how do you start? If it's bass programming, what do you do? (instantiate a plug, create a midi clip, go into clip properties, draw in notes, or record notes, etc etc.) Taking a workflow angle will help people get stuff done, and discover ways to do it on their own as they build their knowledge.
3. If real basic, go back to fundamentals. What's the diff b/w midi and audio? How do you get a midi clip to generate audio? how do you manipulate and sequence audio clips like midi? Stress the vocabulary, always.
4. DO NOT go complex until they're ready. Stuff like Compression are VERY tough topics that require lots of examples and testing. Don't even mention side-chaining until they understand the difference between ratio, threshold, knee.
That should get you started.
Word. Spoken like a true prodigy.nebulae wrote: If any of you get the chance to teach people how to use Live well, then DO IT...it's a great experience for both yourself and the person you help.
ableton support team
[email protected]
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brightonalex
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ratio, threshold and what?nebulae wrote:ollyb303 wrote:nebulae wrote: 4. DO NOT go complex until they're ready. Stuff like Compression are VERY tough topics that require lots of examples and testing. Don't even mention side-chaining until they understand the difference between ratio, threshold, knee.
That should get you started.