You can achieve a similar effect by dragging the Drum Rack’s pads onto each other to swap their note mappings.īecause each slice lives in its own chain in the Drum Rack, you can easily process individual slices with their own audio effects. But you can create new patterns by simply editing the MIDI notes (see ‘Editing MIDI’).
This opens up many new editing possibilities, including:īy default, your sliced MIDI data will form a chromatically-ascending “staircase“ pattern in order to trigger the correct chains in their original order. Playing the MIDI clip will trigger each chain in the Drum Rack in order, according to the timing information that you specified or that was embedded in the audio. Note: Live will take a few moments to process all of this information.
Adjusting one of these Macros will adjust the mapped parameter in each Simpler simultaneously. In the factory Slicing presets, these include basic envelope controls and parameters to adjust the loop and crossfade properties of each slice.
The Slicing Preset chooser contains a few Ableton-supplied slicing templates, as well as any of your own that you may have placed in your User Library’s default presets folder (see ‘Default Presets’). If your audio file is in REX format (see ‘REX Mode’), the slicing will be based on the file’s internal timing information and you won’t see this chooser. You can fix this by either setting a lower slice resolution or by selecting a smaller region of the clip to slice. Since a Rack can contain a maximum of 128 chains, Live won’t let you proceed if your choice would result in more than 128 slices.
The top chooser allows you to slice at a variety of beat resolutions or according to the clip’s transients or Warp Markers. This offers a list of slicing divisions, as well as a chooser to select the Slicing Preset. When you select Slice to New MIDI track, you’ll be presented with a dialog box. The Drum Rack (see ‘Drum Racks’) provides an ideal environment for working with sliced files, and most of the setup happens automatically after you make a few choices: Instead, it simply splits the original audio into portions of time, regardless of the content. Slicing differs from the Convert commands below, in that it doesn’t analyze the musical context of your original audio. This command divides the audio into chunks which are assigned to single MIDI notes. When an audio clip is selected, four conversion commands are available in the Create Menu or the right-click(Win) / CTRL- click(Mac) context menu for the clip.Ĭontext Menu Commands For Converting Audio To MIDI. (Note: the features discussed in this chapter are not available in the Intro and Lite Editions.)Īlthough Live’s warping allows for audio files to be used much more flexibly than in traditional audio software, there are also a number of ways to extract musical information from audio clips and place it into MIDI clips, for additional creative possibilities.