Posted: Fri Dec 14, 2007 8:05 am
Thanks man.
I mean that any plug that produces a sound can be used as the device in a Drum Rack chain, i.e. any of the Ableton instruments, VSTi etc..Tarekith wrote: Mostly the output note is kept at default, C3, because that's the note most samplers use for playing back a sample at original pitch. But that can be changed because you can use any plugin to play a sound in a Drum Rack chain.
>>> What do you mean by any plug in can play a sound? <<<
No. If a chain is set to "All" and contains nothing else, it won't be represented by any pad. It's the chain of the embedded Rack that is represented on the pad, in the current example. Pads look at unique mappings, and don't care about nesting.Tarekith wrote: Pads: A pad represents a note, and only that. So, the pad that is set to play "D1" will play the sounds from any chain that is set to receive D1 as its incoming note, regardless of the level of nesting.
>>> So if all chains are set to "All" for their inputs, it's the actual Pad location (#) that determines which of a clips midi notes are triggering which sounds?
Hey Amaury. Thanks again for your insight. Still having a little trouble getting my head around this - mainly because I am reading from work with little time in front of Live 7 since I bought it.Amaury wrote:
A special case is "All" for the incoming note. It means that this chain would receive and pass on every note, it won't filter anything. This special routing is generally used for the case when you have a group in a chain, i.e. another Drum Rack with unique mappings.
Thanks Micah, I was hoping you'd chime in here if the thread got big enoughmicah frank wrote:Hmmm... not really sure either.
Ableton tweaked a few things (like note mapping) after my work with drum machines finished. The only thing I can think of is that within each multisample mode simpler each sample has it's own note value.
I'll check it out later, but maybe this can shed some light on it.... maybe not.
Hi,dbone wrote:Hey Amaury. Thanks again for your insight. Still having a little trouble getting my head around this - mainly because I am reading from work with little time in front of Live 7 since I bought it.Amaury wrote:
A special case is "All" for the incoming note. It means that this chain would receive and pass on every note, it won't filter anything. This special routing is generally used for the case when you have a group in a chain, i.e. another Drum Rack with unique mappings.
Here is what I am trying to achieve - not sure if it means using an instance of "Sampler" per-pad, nesting racks or if it's something to be solved with a "Scale" object to filter the appropriate note values as somebody else suggested earlier.
* I want to maintain no more than 8 channel strips in the mixer
* I want all "C" notes to represent Kick, all Snares to be "C#" and so on
Tried loading an instance of Sampler per-pad where each Sampler has several different sounds of the same type (eg. Kicks) with each sample an octave up on one note so C-2, C-1, C0 each have a different Kick sample.
This allowed me to stay within the 8 mixer channels, but I wasn't able to trigger the samples via MIDI notes within the clip.
I was *really* hoping just to load up a bunch of pads and be able to direct their audio output to a particular mixer channel via drop-down menu. When I saw the "Route Audio To" box, I thought that was it... but no.
Do you have any suggestions??
Thanks for the reply, Amaury - really appreciate it! Your solution is more or less what I had envisioned but something happened on the way to heaven... probably my being new to Sampler w/ L7.Amaury wrote: Hope that helps,
Amaury
Thanks.micah frank wrote:Hmmm... not really sure either.
Ableton tweaked a few things (like note mapping) after my work with drum machines finished. The only thing I can think of is that within each multisample mode simpler each sample has it's own note value.
I'll check it out later, but maybe this can shed some light on it.... maybe not.