Drums In Ableton
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Re: Drums In Ableton
Yowzer I can't believe people don't use drumracks. I am head over heals for drumracks. I use audio too, mostly for breaks and shit but yeah drumracks. I don't have a set way of doing it. Sometimes I'll have a drum rack each for kicks, snares, hh then percussion then once I get it where I want it I'll group all these together and apply gluing type fx. Sometimes I just keep it simple and use one drumrack for the whole deal. With each tune I am experimenting. I don't even have a custom blank file, some people think thats odd but I think that is an easy way to put yourself in a rut. I start completely stock 120bpm. I never have custom kits either, again ruts. No wrong or right way to do it though, whatever works!
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puppykicker
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Re: Drums In Ableton
Generally speaking (and remembering there are no set rules) I put my kicks n snares on one instance of drum rack and hats/perc/cymbals on another... I would do it all in one rack, but I like to set up a return w/ compression for the kik n snare rack to keep the natural dynamics rather than just compressing the shit out of it... also: so i don't compress the hats and stuff
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9/10- DUBWISE in SLC, Utah
9/18- SD UNION

8/25- Dub Dorado
>>BURNING MAN<<
(all set times for BM are aproximate)
Thursday 1:30pm @ Centercamp w/ UBUV
Thursday sunrise @ Basscamp
Friday 12-1am BrokenBeat @ Bat Country
Saturday Sunrise on the Nautilus X
--
9/10- DUBWISE in SLC, Utah
9/18- SD UNION
- contakt321
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Re: Drums In Ableton
Part of the reason I don't use just one drumrack is the midi editing window gets too cluttered for me, another reason is they use more CPU. Each hit uses the computing power of a single Simpler.abZ wrote:Yowzer I can't believe people don't use drumracks. I am head over heals for drumracks. I use audio too, mostly for breaks and shit but yeah drumracks. I don't have a set way of doing it. Sometimes I'll have a drum rack each for kicks, snares, hh then percussion then once I get it where I want it I'll group all these together and apply gluing type fx. Sometimes I just keep it simple and use one drumrack for the whole deal. With each tune I am experimenting. I don't even have a custom blank file, some people think thats odd but I think that is an easy way to put yourself in a rut. I start completely stock 120bpm. I never have custom kits either, again ruts. No wrong or right way to do it though, whatever works!
Re: Drums In Ableton
I would say get a new computer if you are worried about CPU. My computer is nothing to brag about but I never worry about how much CPU anything is using. I fill my project up with shit until I am done with the tune and I have never had the comp poop out on me.contakt321 wrote:Part of the reason I don't use just one drumrack is the midi editing window gets too cluttered for me, another reason is they use more CPU. Each hit uses the computing power of a single Simpler.abZ wrote:Yowzer I can't believe people don't use drumracks. I am head over heals for drumracks. I use audio too, mostly for breaks and shit but yeah drumracks. I don't have a set way of doing it. Sometimes I'll have a drum rack each for kicks, snares, hh then percussion then once I get it where I want it I'll group all these together and apply gluing type fx. Sometimes I just keep it simple and use one drumrack for the whole deal. With each tune I am experimenting. I don't even have a custom blank file, some people think thats odd but I think that is an easy way to put yourself in a rut. I start completely stock 120bpm. I never have custom kits either, again ruts. No wrong or right way to do it though, whatever works!
What I have been doing lately is loading one drumrack up with a bunch of shit and program all in one window so I don't have to jump around the project then once I get things about where I want, I'll duplicate the whole track as many times as necessary and then delete notes from each one. Like make a kick one, delete all notes except the kick and then erase the kick in the main one. Seems to work nicely and the only reason I do this is so I can can trigger a compressor just from the kick or just from the snare. Sometimes you don't need to do that so I will just leave them all in one.
- hurlingdervish
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Re: Drums In Ableton
ive found that doing them manually in the arrangement takes up WAY more resourcescontakt321 wrote:Part of the reason I don't use just one drumrack is the midi editing window gets too cluttered for me, another reason is they use more CPU. Each hit uses the computing power of a single Simpler.abZ wrote:Yowzer I can't believe people don't use drumracks. I am head over heals for drumracks. I use audio too, mostly for breaks and shit but yeah drumracks. I don't have a set way of doing it. Sometimes I'll have a drum rack each for kicks, snares, hh then percussion then once I get it where I want it I'll group all these together and apply gluing type fx. Sometimes I just keep it simple and use one drumrack for the whole deal. With each tune I am experimenting. I don't even have a custom blank file, some people think thats odd but I think that is an easy way to put yourself in a rut. I start completely stock 120bpm. I never have custom kits either, again ruts. No wrong or right way to do it though, whatever works!
- hurlingdervish
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Re: Drums In Ableton
theres an easier way to do thatabZ wrote: What I have been doing lately is loading one drumrack up with a bunch of shit and program all in one window so I don't have to jump around the project then once I get things about where I want, I'll duplicate the whole track as many times as necessary and then delete notes from each one. Like make a kick one, delete all notes except the kick and then erase the kick in the main one. Seems to work nicely and the only reason I do this is so I can can trigger a compressor just from the kick or just from the snare. Sometimes you don't need to do that so I will just leave them all in one.
select the names of the hits in the i/o drum rack window, right click----> extract chains. now those hats you selected are in a new drum rack with ALL the same midi info, including the samples you didn't extract
just saw this in another post the other day....wtf
- contakt321
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Re: Drums In Ableton
I am running a MacBook from last year, it's not like my computer is crap. In the past I was running 4 drum racks (one for Kicks, one for Snares, one for Hats, one for Perc) and I was getting slowdown.abZ wrote: I would say get a new computer if you are worried about CPU. My computer is nothing to brag about but I never worry about how much CPU anything is using. I fill my project up with shit until I am done with the tune and I have never had the comp poop out on me.
What I have been doing lately is loading one drumrack up with a bunch of shit and program all in one window so I don't have to jump around the project then once I get things about where I want, I'll duplicate the whole track as many times as necessary and then delete notes from each one. Like make a kick one, delete all notes except the kick and then erase the kick in the main one. Seems to work nicely and the only reason I do this is so I can can trigger a compressor just from the kick or just from the snare. Sometimes you don't need to do that so I will just leave them all in one.
Doing it all in one drumrack I found having all that midi data too cluttered and bothersome looking, for some reason (maybe my MPC background - having everything on 1 track) I like having things separated.
@ Hurling - I agree. I don't do it all in Session view, generally for some instruments, I lay out 4 bars in arrange as audio, consolidate, then make into a 4 bar audio loop and bring back to Session view.
My last track for example I did the following for drums:
Kick sample, laid out in Arrange, made into a 4 bar audio loop, then back in session.
Percussion Loop, chopped, re-arranged in Arrange, made into two 4 bar loops, then back in session.
Conga Loop, chopped, re-arranged in Arrange, made into a 4 bar loop, then back in session. Then modulating pitch and filter with clip envelopes.
Snare sample, laid out in Arrange, made into a 4 bar audio loop, then back in session. Then modulating pitch and filter with clip envelopes.
Open HiHat, played in Impulse, two 4 bar midi loops. One modulating pitch with clip envelopes.
Crash, played in Impulse, two different 8 bar midi loops.
Reverse Crash, just laid directly onto Arrange timeline
Admittedly, this is still using a lot of CPU - well, that and two instances of Kore + Massive are enough to slowdown my MacBook, but for my writing process works the best so far. That said, I like the extract chain option, it might help me.
Re: Drums In Ableton
I usually use the drum rack. I like how I'm able to apply individual eqs/comp/etc to each channel, and I have a shit ton of channels available for it. You can obviously do whatever is more fluid for you, but I have a preference for the racks myself.
Really the only times i use arrangement view for drums is if i'm chopping breaks. I find it just takes to much time laying everything out in arrangement view when I can just load up the drum racks, get my samples sorted and start banging the beats out on my midi controllers, then just adjusting everything else manually to taste. Sometimes I have 1-2 racks, sometimes 5-6 - just depends on the tune and what I want. The possibilities are almost endless.
Really the only times i use arrangement view for drums is if i'm chopping breaks. I find it just takes to much time laying everything out in arrangement view when I can just load up the drum racks, get my samples sorted and start banging the beats out on my midi controllers, then just adjusting everything else manually to taste. Sometimes I have 1-2 racks, sometimes 5-6 - just depends on the tune and what I want. The possibilities are almost endless.
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Re: Drums In Ableton
Nice, yeah that sounds a lot more efficient. I have only been on Ableton for a year or so. Still learning things all the time that makes things better and quicker.hurlingdervish wrote:theres an easier way to do thatabZ wrote: What I have been doing lately is loading one drumrack up with a bunch of shit and program all in one window so I don't have to jump around the project then once I get things about where I want, I'll duplicate the whole track as many times as necessary and then delete notes from each one. Like make a kick one, delete all notes except the kick and then erase the kick in the main one. Seems to work nicely and the only reason I do this is so I can can trigger a compressor just from the kick or just from the snare. Sometimes you don't need to do that so I will just leave them all in one.
select the names of the hits in the i/o drum rack window, right click----> extract chains. now those hats you selected are in a new drum rack with ALL the same midi info, including the samples you didn't extract
just saw this in another post the other day....wtf![]()
![]()
Re: Drums In Ableton
I am not trying to be a dick but what exactly are you saving the CPU for? You can't take it with you when you diecontakt321 wrote:I am running a MacBook from last year, it's not like my computer is crap. In the past I was running 4 drum racks (one for Kicks, one for Snares, one for Hats, one for Perc) and I was getting slowdown.abZ wrote: I would say get a new computer if you are worried about CPU. My computer is nothing to brag about but I never worry about how much CPU anything is using. I fill my project up with shit until I am done with the tune and I have never had the comp poop out on me.
What I have been doing lately is loading one drumrack up with a bunch of shit and program all in one window so I don't have to jump around the project then once I get things about where I want, I'll duplicate the whole track as many times as necessary and then delete notes from each one. Like make a kick one, delete all notes except the kick and then erase the kick in the main one. Seems to work nicely and the only reason I do this is so I can can trigger a compressor just from the kick or just from the snare. Sometimes you don't need to do that so I will just leave them all in one.
Doing it all in one drumrack I found having all that midi data too cluttered and bothersome looking, for some reason (maybe my MPC background - having everything on 1 track) I like having things separated.
@ Hurling - I agree. I don't do it all in Session view, generally for some instruments, I lay out 4 bars in arrange as audio, consolidate, then make into a 4 bar audio loop and bring back to Session view.
My last track for example I did the following for drums:
Kick sample, laid out in Arrange, made into a 4 bar audio loop, then back in session.
Percussion Loop, chopped, re-arranged in Arrange, made into two 4 bar loops, then back in session.
Conga Loop, chopped, re-arranged in Arrange, made into a 4 bar loop, then back in session. Then modulating pitch and filter with clip envelopes.
Snare sample, laid out in Arrange, made into a 4 bar audio loop, then back in session. Then modulating pitch and filter with clip envelopes.
Open HiHat, played in Impulse, two 4 bar midi loops. One modulating pitch with clip envelopes.
Crash, played in Impulse, two different 8 bar midi loops.
Reverse Crash, just laid directly onto Arrange timeline
Admittedly, this is still using a lot of CPU - well, that and two instances of Kore + Massive are enough to slowdown my MacBook, but for my writing process works the best so far. That said, I like the extract chain option, it might help me.
Re: Drums In Ableton
I lay everything out as audio.
Just effect each channel.
Just effect each channel.
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- contakt321
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Re: Drums In Ableton
HAHA. "You can't take it with you when you die"abZ wrote: I am not trying to be a dick but what exactly are you saving the CPU for? You can't take it with you when you dieI just seriously have never run out of CPU or memory. You running 6 instances of Massive or something? I am just curious.
I have been really into Kore lately, the problem is that it really eats up my CPU. My last track had I think two instances of Massive and two of Kore and I get drop outs when they all play at once.
In the past running 4 drum racks plus an instance or two of Massive and a few other instruments and I would get the same.
(please note this is before I start adding effects - which is what I save processing power for)
I just try to keep my CPU as low as possible when writing so I can get ideas down fluidly (w/o changing the settings on my soundcard).
Re: Drums In Ableton
I got ya, I guess I don't use anything that is really all that taxing plus I use a desktop pc.contakt321 wrote:HAHA. "You can't take it with you when you die"abZ wrote: I am not trying to be a dick but what exactly are you saving the CPU for? You can't take it with you when you dieI just seriously have never run out of CPU or memory. You running 6 instances of Massive or something? I am just curious.
I have been really into Kore lately, the problem is that it really eats up my CPU. My last track had I think two instances of Massive and two of Kore and I get drop outs when they all play at once.
In the past running 4 drum racks plus an instance or two of Massive and a few other instruments and I would get the same.
(please note this is before I start adding effects - which is what I save processing power for)
I just try to keep my CPU as low as possible when writing so I can get ideas down fluidly (w/o changing the settings on my soundcard).
Re: Drums In Ableton
lucky...!!abZ wrote:I would say get a new computer if you are worried about CPU. My computer is nothing to brag about but I never worry about how much CPU anything is using. I fill my project up with shit until I am done with the tune and I have never had the comp poop out on me.contakt321 wrote:Part of the reason I don't use just one drumrack is the midi editing window gets too cluttered for me, another reason is they use more CPU. Each hit uses the computing power of a single Simpler.abZ wrote:Yowzer I can't believe people don't use drumracks. I am head over heals for drumracks. I use audio too, mostly for breaks and shit but yeah drumracks. I don't have a set way of doing it. Sometimes I'll have a drum rack each for kicks, snares, hh then percussion then once I get it where I want it I'll group all these together and apply gluing type fx. Sometimes I just keep it simple and use one drumrack for the whole deal. With each tune I am experimenting. I don't even have a custom blank file, some people think thats odd but I think that is an easy way to put yourself in a rut. I start completely stock 120bpm. I never have custom kits either, again ruts. No wrong or right way to do it though, whatever works!
my computer is from like 05... play more than 2 instances of operator at the same time and it starts to have trouble...
Re: Drums In Ableton
Not lucky I just build myself a new kit every 3/4 years. Didn't put more than like 700usd into it. It is time folks. My computer 2 years ago would only run Reason safely fuck that.narcissus wrote:lucky...!!abZ wrote:I would say get a new computer if you are worried about CPU. My computer is nothing to brag about but I never worry about how much CPU anything is using. I fill my project up with shit until I am done with the tune and I have never had the comp poop out on me.contakt321 wrote:Part of the reason I don't use just one drumrack is the midi editing window gets too cluttered for me, another reason is they use more CPU. Each hit uses the computing power of a single Simpler.abZ wrote:Yowzer I can't believe people don't use drumracks. I am head over heals for drumracks. I use audio too, mostly for breaks and shit but yeah drumracks. I don't have a set way of doing it. Sometimes I'll have a drum rack each for kicks, snares, hh then percussion then once I get it where I want it I'll group all these together and apply gluing type fx. Sometimes I just keep it simple and use one drumrack for the whole deal. With each tune I am experimenting. I don't even have a custom blank file, some people think thats odd but I think that is an easy way to put yourself in a rut. I start completely stock 120bpm. I never have custom kits either, again ruts. No wrong or right way to do it though, whatever works!
my computer is from like 05... play more than 2 instances of operator at the same time and it starts to have trouble...
- contakt321
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Re: Drums In Ableton
Wow. So, how do you do your drums in Ableton? Now I am interested.narcissus wrote: lucky...!!
my computer is from like 05... play more than 2 instances of operator at the same time and it starts to have trouble...
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