One thing I feel I should mention is that you can actually quantize transients and warp markers! I just found out today and it's saving me so much time.
I know this not why most of your subscribers are here, but your ableton tutorials are some of the best out there. Straight to the point and so many simple yet extremely useful tips
Love your teaching style! Your calm and warm temperament doesn’t make it too overwhelming like other hosts that go overboard on the video editing and personalities just to teach a concept. Keep them going. You’re doing amazing work!
Former Logic Pro user here. Using Ableton to work with collaborators at some point. I couldn't find a way to solve problems in Ableton solely so I ended up using both Logic Pro and Ableton and bounce stems back and forth. Thank you for these tips. Wonderful
Great video, David! Appreciate when a "Ableton tips" video actually highlights some hidden or lesser used features of Ableton and not just "Press tab to swap between Session and arrangement view" or stuff from page 5 of the manual. This also makes me want to upgrade from Live 10 to 11 so bad!
I’ve recently switched from Pro Tools to Live and I have to say, beyond all the other stuff I love about Live, doing composite edits from takes is so much easier and smoother a workflow than Pro Tools and it’s “playlists” and related. It’s funny that it’s something so utilitarian but it’s one of my fave features and was apparently only introduced in 11. Merry producing!🤘🏻😊
I have never liked, subscribed and commented on a video this fast. This had the most useful tips that I did not know after years of using Ableton. Thanks for the fantastic video.
I’ve been playing in session view exclusively thinking of arrangement view as a place for recording when I’m done creating… this level of dissection and rebuilding is incredible. Thank you so much for demonstrating!
Thanks for this, all very interesting. I particularly liked using the BEAT clip analysis mode to make a pulsing bass beat from a held note, I would never have thought of that!
Absolutely brilliant! Fantastic examples to match the thorough, clear and concise explanations. Thanks for sharing your knowledge and keep up the good work David.
When comping from Takes, Split (Cmd-E) is unnecessary. Simply select the audio you want in the main track/comp and hit Enter. Really great vid. Thanks!
As a new user this is fantastic as lots confused me about audio editing but I'm quickly getting there. The warping and tempo following was especially informative. Audio-to-notes was a research topic a few years back. Amazing how well it can work. Just amazingly powerful (and fun) software! Thanks
I got a lot out of this. I spent the evening following along with my own material including my Little Phatty and acoustic guitar. I ended up with some strange drums from water drops on a baking sheet pan. Lots of great tips.
Thanks for the helpful video. One question. I record solo jazz guitar, which of course makes every mistake super obvious. Rather than recording 50 takes hoping to get a perfect one, how do I replace a measure that is badly played with a measure from another take that is properly played? Thanks again.
Are... you... serious... ??? I NEVER knew about the Ctrl+Shift to move the WAV file inside the clip? You would not believe how much time I've lost trying to edit the start position of the audio clip in the WAV editor section.
I'm so used to edit audio in Reaper that I always struggle with the shortcuts in Ableton. I guess I could change my keyboard shortcuts in Reaper to match those of Live, but I'd have the rebuild muscle memory all over again.
Awesome video David. Lots of super useful shortcuts, slipping and stretching - exactly what I was looking for! I cannot for the life of me figure out how to get the tempo to follow a particular track. The tempo automation doesn't show up as it did in your video. Do you have any settings going on that enable this?
Loved the video David! I was wondering if there's any reason you didn't use Ableton's audio quantization feature in the beginning instead of moving the transients yourself?
Depending on the complexity of the material you're warping it's not always particularly reliable........ Also not a fan of over-warping audio as it's nice to retain a certain amount of groove from the original recording.
Great video. But (this being about the tenth video about audio editing I watch , and me still haven't found an answer to the question/issue that started my search) imo it skips one thing (like the nine videos I watched before ;-)): when and why do you record/(start) edit(ing) in session view and when in arrangement view? Are there differences/ consequences? Does that matter? I'm curious. Certainly when you, like I did, recorded something on you phone and want to use it in your project. Thx in advance.
One thing I feel I should mention is that you can actually quantize transients and warp markers! I just found out today and it's saving me so much time.
Good Lord! I just learned more about Ableton in 15 mins than I would have in a month from some other channels. 👍
I know this not why most of your subscribers are here, but your ableton tutorials are some of the best out there. Straight to the point and so many simple yet extremely useful tips
Love your teaching style! Your calm and warm temperament doesn’t make it too overwhelming like other hosts that go overboard on the video editing and personalities just to teach a concept. Keep them going. You’re doing amazing work!
Former Logic Pro user here. Using Ableton to work with collaborators at some point. I couldn't find a way to solve problems in Ableton solely so I ended up using both Logic Pro and Ableton and bounce stems back and forth. Thank you for these tips. Wonderful
Great video, David!
Appreciate when a "Ableton tips" video actually highlights some hidden or lesser used features of Ableton and not just "Press tab to swap between Session and arrangement view" or stuff from page 5 of the manual.
This also makes me want to upgrade from Live 10 to 11 so bad!
I’ve recently switched from Pro Tools to Live and I have to say, beyond all the other stuff I love about Live, doing composite edits from takes is so much easier and smoother a workflow than Pro Tools and it’s “playlists” and related. It’s funny that it’s something so utilitarian but it’s one of my fave features and was apparently only introduced in 11. Merry producing!🤘🏻😊
Best ableton tutor on UA-cam! And i have been learning from tons of other good ones.
I have never liked, subscribed and commented on a video this fast. This had the most useful tips that I did not know after years of using Ableton. Thanks for the fantastic video.
I’ve been playing in session view exclusively thinking of arrangement view as a place for recording when I’m done creating… this level of dissection and rebuilding is incredible. Thank you so much for demonstrating!
Thanks for this, all very interesting. I particularly liked using the BEAT clip analysis mode to make a pulsing bass beat from a held note, I would never have thought of that!
Any ableton tips videos are greatly appreciated.
I feel the same way. It is a HUGE topic and sorta daunting sometimes/easy to get lost in.
Absolutely brilliant! Fantastic examples to match the thorough, clear and concise explanations.
Thanks for sharing your knowledge and keep up the good work David.
When comping from Takes, Split (Cmd-E) is unnecessary. Simply select the audio you want in the main track/comp and hit Enter. Really great vid. Thanks!
Tip 10 on warping the viola into a rhythmic bass 😱. Thank you David. Looking forward to more such content!
As a new user this is fantastic as lots confused me about audio editing but I'm quickly getting there. The warping and tempo following was especially informative. Audio-to-notes was a research topic a few years back. Amazing how well it can work. Just amazingly powerful (and fun) software! Thanks
I got a lot out of this. I spent the evening following along with my own material including my Little Phatty and acoustic guitar. I ended up with some strange drums from water drops on a baking sheet pan. Lots of great tips.
wow! you super talented. the music isnt my specific genre of taste but the creativity is excellant!! well done David!!!
I love your videos. Thank you
Excellent tutorial, best i have seen so far for audio clips edition. Thanks.
Super helpful. Big fan of ableton but primarily work with audio so this just unlocked a lot of possibilities for me
Tip 5 rather than export the track you could have just hit freeze then flatten. I find it speeds up my workflow when doing jobs like that.
Freeze and Flatten has been a life saver!!
Your awesome man! Just what I was looking for. Much gratitude 🙏🏽
I'm on Bitwig, but a lot of concepts are the same. Very useful, thank you.
Some really cool and useful features! Thanks for demo-ing them in such a practical way.
Nicely presented..... Clear, concise and informative. 👍
Just switched from logic to ableton and this is super helpful! Thank you 🙏🏻
Super helpful! Some nice creative ideas in there too, looking forward to trying them out
Thanks, again a great video, David!
Thanks for the tutorial. I like your music too.
Thanks David - really appreciate these tips. Top guy👍
Very helping ,clear and to the point. Thanks
Thank you David, just what I needed!
You're a very good teacher.
What a great video. Thank you very much for this. The info, the ideas, the approach. Subscribed 🙂
Thanks for the helpful video. One question. I record solo jazz guitar, which of course makes every mistake super obvious. Rather than recording 50 takes hoping to get a perfect one, how do I replace a measure that is badly played with a measure from another take that is properly played? Thanks again.
Hope this helps: that is known as “comping”, you can search for that here on youtube or in the ableton documentation.
So appreciate what you do
You can also use the Pencil Tool (b) to select Take Lane sections on the fly.
Solid tips. I hate when I forget these things while I’m working and only remembering later.
VERY HELPFUL!!!
Thank You for Sharing.
Cheers
lovely work!!! thank you
Brilliant, thanks for sharing!
Wow, so informative and inspirational.
Great video, man! Thanks
You can also use Melodyne to tune instruments nicely.
Are... you... serious... ???
I NEVER knew about the Ctrl+Shift to move the WAV file inside the clip?
You would not believe how much time I've lost trying to edit the start position of the audio clip in the WAV editor section.
I'm so used to edit audio in Reaper that I always struggle with the shortcuts in Ableton. I guess I could change my keyboard shortcuts in Reaper to match those of Live, but I'd have the rebuild muscle memory all over again.
You are amazing thank you!!
That was great. Thank you.
Really helpful. Thanks very much.
Great video, subscribed!
Awesome video David. Lots of super useful shortcuts, slipping and stretching - exactly what I was looking for! I cannot for the life of me figure out how to get the tempo to follow a particular track. The tempo automation doesn't show up as it did in your video. Do you have any settings going on that enable this?
Loved the video David! I was wondering if there's any reason you didn't use Ableton's audio quantization feature in the beginning instead of moving the transients yourself?
Ah, I definitely should have. I guess I'm just in the habit of messing around with clips by hand.
Depending on the complexity of the material you're warping it's not always particularly reliable........ Also not a fan of over-warping audio as it's nice to retain a certain amount of groove from the original recording.
insane thank you
AMAZING
great video thanks man
what's that smile at 8.13? never seen you so happy before😄
ur super mellow thanks bro
ITS REALLY WORKED LOL THANK YOU DUDE
Great video. But (this being about the tenth video about audio editing I watch , and me still haven't found an answer to the question/issue that started my search) imo it skips one thing (like the nine videos I watched before ;-)): when and why do you record/(start) edit(ing) in session view and when in arrangement view? Are there differences/ consequences? Does that matter? I'm curious. Certainly when you, like I did, recorded something on you phone and want to use it in your project. Thx in advance.
Perfect tutorial! Correct amount of time spend on correct tips...
Useful
Can we get a tutorial on how to afford a viola? Thanks
How did you only use the wet signal of the high pitched arp?
I believe he set the dry/wet setting on the reverb effect to 100%
0:02
Hi Dave
What do you recommend if you are trying to get one audio sample at the same tempo but there at two different tempos
Like the first part is at one and the last is the other
❤
so good, I didn't even sk1p anything ; - ]
Just to confirm, you did a bad job "intentionally," right? It was intentional?