Hey Jake and Brian, love your work as always. With regard to Jake's comment at the end of the video I just thought that I'd let you know that for the 30+ years that I've been involved with my church as a worship musician (in multiple locations), our culture has always been to ask the congregation to pick songs on-the-fly. Most days are good, some days are completely off the rails awesome, and some days have songs that not every one knows. And with a shout-out to Fuller, there 'aint no way I'm doing this without a music stand !!
Also to add I do know that Elevation actually has a person who runs their whole Abelton rig so they can be spontaneous if the pastor wants to call up a song on the fly. It is crazy and cool at the same time. Though to do that you have to have someone that only runs that.
So in our instance we have a volunteer set up lights, someone make slides, and our md makes our tracks.... how does this work in this manner? does our team send everything to our md?
Do you pre mix your multitracks or can your sound engineer mix and equ etc during a service if need be? Maybe a sound is louder on the Sunday than it was on a practive, can your sound engineer mix the multitracks? Thank you
Does all of this automation get in the way of letting someone serve by running slides or running lights? I love this stuff and think it is so cool but I also don't want to just kick out the person who is currently running slides for us.
Hey guys! Do you guys feel that you lose anything by having your sessions so heavily structured? We will often just flow organically in worship and it doesn't seem that it's that easy to do with a system like this.
Not really. I've always been the type of worship leader who makes a plan and sticks with it but still having the flexibility between or after songs to flow. Ableton allows us to easily do it. If you don't know what songs you are gonna sing going into a worship service, then it probably isn't a good fit.
@@Churchfront Ye I guess if you're still able to flow naturally between songs it's not actually that rigid. Thinking about it again most of the more organic stuff in our sessions comes after the planned arrangement for a song is complete.
You're definitely losing the organic feel. I would never want to perform with a robot telling me exactly what to do in my ear. Takes all the fun out of it.
Hey Jake would having multiple midi control networks only going to one computer cause some weird issues. I know you said in another video you had some issues with the midi network. Or are you doing this because you have enough overlap of command notes?
Business idea...a small team of session designers. A worship pastor can submit their PCO plans to your team...your session designers build the session. Charge per session design :-)
Already thought of this one! The problem comes with the legality of sharing audio stems of master tracks. It would violate the terms of agreement with a lot of the big distributors (loop community, multitracks, etc.).
Dreams do come true.
Funny how I actually just looked into this and BAM! God said, "Check out Worship Tutorials!"
There it is!!
Ha I promised him last week 😢. Better late than never, though!
I’m intrigued by the remote ableton session on computer 2 launching section. Where can I find out more?
Hey Jake and Brian, love your work as always. With regard to Jake's comment at the end of the video I just thought that I'd let you know that for the 30+ years that I've been involved with my church as a worship musician (in multiple locations), our culture has always been to ask the congregation to pick songs on-the-fly. Most days are good, some days are completely off the rails awesome, and some days have songs that not every one knows. And with a shout-out to Fuller, there 'aint no way I'm doing this without a music stand !!
Also to add I do know that Elevation actually has a person who runs their whole Abelton rig so they can be spontaneous if the pastor wants to call up a song on the fly. It is crazy and cool at the same time. Though to do that you have to have someone that only runs that.
Thanks Bryan and Jake! good information
You show how it can work, but you don't show how to do it like a walk through with a song. Do you have a video like that?
that's what I call a pro gamer move right there
I'm learning a lot 😊
cant you use a trigger pad i.e from akai to advance te next section or song?
how do I setup multiple tracks in Ableton to play Lightkey triggers. I can only get one to play at a time.
How do I get the preview view in LightKey? I play the presets in Ableton Live but nothing happens in LightKey under the Live tab.
So in our instance we have a volunteer set up lights, someone make slides, and our md makes our tracks.... how does this work in this manner? does our team send everything to our md?
Did I hear correctly that the click track and the music direction is free?
Hey, the link for the training is coming up 404 - has the video been removed?
You should use clarity for lights it works very well
You had me at midi control for your mainstage and/or Helix?! just stand there and play guitar?! What?!
Do you pre mix your multitracks or can your sound engineer mix and equ etc during a service if need be? Maybe a sound is louder on the Sunday than it was on a practive, can your sound engineer mix the multitracks?
Thank you
Does all of this automation get in the way of letting someone serve by running slides or running lights? I love this stuff and think it is so cool but I also don't want to just kick out the person who is currently running slides for us.
yes
What a business.
Hey guys! Do you guys feel that you lose anything by having your sessions so heavily structured? We will often just flow organically in worship and it doesn't seem that it's that easy to do with a system like this.
Not really. I've always been the type of worship leader who makes a plan and sticks with it but still having the flexibility between or after songs to flow. Ableton allows us to easily do it. If you don't know what songs you are gonna sing going into a worship service, then it probably isn't a good fit.
@@Churchfront Ye I guess if you're still able to flow naturally between songs it's not actually that rigid. Thinking about it again most of the more organic stuff in our sessions comes after the planned arrangement for a song is complete.
@@actionarnie78 exactly
You're definitely losing the organic feel. I would never want to perform with a robot telling me exactly what to do in my ear. Takes all the fun out of it.
Woah wait, it's possible to drag individual Ableton projects into another one??
Andy Robison of course :)
Just drag and drop it from the file library / browser
Their you are Jake Gosselin
Hey Jake would having multiple midi control networks only going to one computer cause some weird issues. I know you said in another video you had some issues with the midi network. Or are you doing this because you have enough overlap of command notes?
No issues. We are now using iConnectivity devices for a more reliable setup. You can check that video out on my channel.
first comment! watch all your vids and I finally got the first comment!
What about in fl studio ??
Almost first
Business idea...a small team of session designers. A worship pastor can submit their PCO plans to your team...your session designers build the session. Charge per session design :-)
Already thought of this one! The problem comes with the legality of sharing audio stems of master tracks. It would violate the terms of agreement with a lot of the big distributors (loop community, multitracks, etc.).
This is extremely confusing!