Ableton Live is a very unique software application that has steadily risen in popularity amongst producers, DJs, electronic musicians
Thavius Beck – Ableton Music Production – Level 1
Course Overview
In this course, you’ll learn about the capabilities of Ableton Live music production and live performance software from Ableton Live certified instructor, Thavius Beck. Ableton Live is a very unique software application that has steadily risen in popularity amongst producers, DJs, electronic musicians, and instrumentalists alike, thanks to its unique approach to music recording.
In Ableton Live, you can record using the standard DAW (digital audio workstation) approach of recording tracks into an arrangement window and mix using faders, but with the built-in Session view, the possibilities become endless. Session view allows you to view your music as “clips”, which are audio/MIDI recordings (small or large) that you can stack together in various ways and combinations to unlock your creative potential and find sounds and musical phrases.
We couldn’t think of anyone better than Thavius Beck to take you through the software, guiding you through all of the key features and preferences so that you making music like you’ve never made before. The skills you’ll learn from this Ableton Live master will enable you to reach deep into the application and produce music like a professional. There’s a reason why Daft Punk, Deadmau5, Skrillex, Kaskade, Armin Van Buuren, Diplo, Hot Chip, M83, and countless others have been producing with Ableton and Thavius will show you why!
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Course Curriculum
Section 1: Introduction and Understanding the Interface
Project Files
What is a DAW? Ableton Live is one of the most unique DAWs available today, and has become more and more popular as people realize how much it can do compared to other DAWs. But before we can fully appreciate what makes Live unique, we should first clearly define what a DAW is and how one typically functions. (3:24)
What Makes Ableton Live Unique? Now that we understand what a typical DAW should do, lets find out what separates Ableton Live from the rest of the pack. It can do a lot more than just record and playback audio, as we will soon see… (5:37)
Arrangement View and Session View One of the many unique features of Ableton Live is its use of two distinct views. The Arrangement View uses a linear timeline and will be most familiar to those of you who have used other DAWs before. However, the true power of the software begins to reveal itself when we understand how to use the Session View. (10:55)
Using Live’s Browser When inspiration strikes you, it is nice to be able to grabbing or creating sounds right away. But searching through and endless sea of folders on your computers file explorer might not be the most inspiring way to go about that. Thankfully, Live’s built-in browser can simplify this process for us, and even allow us to search folders on our computer without leaving Live’s interface. (12:48)
Ableton Live’s Preferences Before we dive into creating and composing with Live, let’s explore the Preferences. There are a lot of settings that we can adjust, such as the audio interface we use, which MIDI controllers are enabled, and even change the entire color scheme or zoom level of the interface. (12:48)
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Section 2: Clips, the building blocks of Live
What are Clips? All musical elements in Live are contained in either Audio or MIDI clips, so it is very important for us to understand what clips are, how they function, and how they can be used to create full compositions. Clips are essentially the building blocks of Ableton Live, and the key to us creating and capturing our ideas. (17:11)
What is MIDI?/Computer Keyboard as MIDI Keyboard We can use Ableton Live like a full fledged studio, but the one thing we don’t have are actual instruments. Thankfully, we have MIDI instruments that can be played with a MIDI controller or our computer keyboard. But first, we should find out what MIDI is and how Live uses the MIDI messages it receives. (7:23)
MIDI clips Now that we know what clips are, and we know what MIDI is, lets take a look at a MIDI clip and some of the MIDI clips properties. Doing this will gives us a foundation to playing and recording ideas with our MIDI instruments. (11:09)
Difference between Audio and MIDI clips Since MIDI clips and Audio clips serve slightly different purposes (MIDI clips contain notes and velocity, while audio clips contain audio samples), lets quickly compare and contrast the two clips types so we’re familiar with the unique properties of each. (3:40)
What is “Warping?” Ableton Live has many tricks up its figurative sleeves, and one of the most fundamental aspects of how it functions is the Warp feature. When audio clips are properly warped, they will adhere to our projects master tempo, regardless of the original tempo of the audio material. This allows us to combine clips of completely different tempos and have them play in sync, but that is just scratching the surface… (12:30)
Section 3: Working with Audio Clips
Importing Audio Loops If our Preferences are properly set, we can to import various audio samples and have them automatically warped and looped. This allows us to quickly get several musical elements playing in sync with the project tempo. We just have to make sure that if we want to play multiple clips at a time, they are placed on different audio tracks. (14:13)
Clip Launch Quantization You might have noticed by now that when you launch a clip while the transport is running, it doesn’t immediately playing. Instead, it waits until the beginning of the next bar. Why is that? It’s because Ableton Live automatically quantizes the launching of clips to 1 bar by default. Let’s explore how this works (8:52)
Basic Clip Launch Properties In addition to our audio and MIDI clip properties, we also have Clip Launch properties, which will affect how the clips behaves when launched. This gives us a lot of flexibility when it comes to how we play and combine the clips in our project. (7:29)
Basic Clip Envelopes Each clip in Ableton Live has its own individual Clip Envelopes. These clip envelopes allow us to modulate (change) a parameter over time. By utilizing these clip envelopes we can automate anything from a simple volume fade to a stuttering volume gate, or nearly anything else you can imagine. Let’s take a look at how they work. (13:25)
Follow Action with Clip Envelopes Typically, when you launch a clip, it will play until it reaches the end of the clip, and if Loop is enable it will just keep looping the same clip indefinitely. However, we can also tell each clip to play for a specific amount of time and then launch another clip on that same track. This is done by using Follow Action. (7:35)
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