Book Image

The Music Producer's Creative Guide to Ableton Live 11

By : Anna Lakatos
Book Image

The Music Producer's Creative Guide to Ableton Live 11

By: Anna Lakatos

Overview of this book

The Music Producer's Guide to Ableton Live will help you sharpen your production skills and gain a deeper understanding of the Live workflow. If you are a music maker working with other digital audios workstations (DAWs) or experienced in Ableton Live, perhaps earlier versions, you’ll be able to put your newfound knowledge to use right away with this book. You’ll start with some basic features and workflows that are more suitable for producers from another DAW looking to transfer their skills to Ableton Live 11.2. As you explore the Live concept, you’ll learn to create expressive music using Groove and MIDI effects and demystify Live 11’s new workflow improvements, such as Note Chance and Velocity Randomization. The book then introduces the Scale Mode, MIDI Transform tools, and other key features that can make composition and coming up with melodic elements easier than ever before. It will also guide you in implementing Live 11's new and updated effects into your current workflow. By the end of this Ableton Live book, you’ll be able to implement advanced production and workflow techniques and amplify live performance capabilities with what the Live 11 workflow has to offer.
Table of Contents (23 chapters)
1
Part 1: The Live Concept and Workflow
7
Part 2: Creative Music Production Techniques with Ableton Live 11
15
Part 3: Deep Dive into Ableton Live

An introduction to Device Racks in Live

By creating Device Racks, you can build your own complex devices that contain effects and instruments.

You can create multilayered instruments, apply signal splitting and parallel processing, to name just a few of the uses of Device Racks.

If you think about it, when you have, for example, a MIDI track, you insert a MIDI effect on it, an instrument, and stack up some audio effects to follow the instrument. You are creating one chain of devices, just like how you would in other DAWs (Digital Audio Workstations).

However, if you are, for example, working on an Instrument Rack, you are able to create multiple device chains playing in parallel, meaning you can have several instruments stacked up on the same track. All these instrument chains can also have their own effect processing, and then the output of all these chains gets summarized as the output of the Instrument Rack.

Drum Racks work a little differently, but we will be having...