sidi wrote:alright, tried it, its cool but in my opinion the finder is a bit chunky to browse samples.. drum racks are the easiest thing ever made. you just have your ableton browser and can quickly listen to all da samples, and if you like one, just drag it into one free slot. it has 16 free slots but you can scroll up and down and then you have even more! when you doubleclick your sample, then you can edit basic things like attack, pitch, fliters and stuff and you also see the waveform. i dont know, its maybe not as extensive as ultrabeat or esx24 but it's quick and simple, it lets you get down your ideas quickly. and that's what it's all about imo!

you should try it out, everything works in one window and its so much less clicking and moving things.
wow, these ableton users dont seem to know whats good with the program and whats not...
What makes the drum racks that awesome isn't the ability to drag sounds in to it, you can pretty much set up simpler or sampler to work better with just quick drum kit auditioning.
No, the real strengh lies in the ability to host multiple vst's and au's at the same time. It's like it quick-freezes every slot after u've edited it, because the drum rack don't really take up a lot of RAM and the latency is like the lowest iv'e seen when it come's to pad mashing apps. Of course u will experience some RAM lossage if u load an alchemy in to every single slot...
You can pretty much build an entire track in the drum rack and it would keep everything tidy and organized. That's what makes it rly cool!
It's the ultimate tool for pad mashers!..
Still 'tho, Logic owns Ableton (you can't argue with the sample editing in Logic)...
