I've been using Ableton for a while but I never thought about changing the envelopes of the Warp modes. Some times the easiest things have the biggest potential. Inspiring as always!
This is brilliant for two reasons - 1) incredibly helpful advice and 2) because it really feels like you dropped a load of speed before recording this one. I've been rewatching your series on making the album and this just feels like you've turned yourself up to 11. Amazing video. As a recent Ableton convert, I'll definitely be using these techniques.
I wish I could give multiple likes solely for the trick on having independently running automation. I've posted the question on how to do that on multiple forums and no one has ever been able to help me with that.
One of my favorite electronic IDM artist is Access to Arasaka. I’ve wondered for a long time how he got the glitch sounds from an Alesis Ion on his early albums but now I think a huge part of that sound is from clip editing. He mentioned he used soundforge heavily in an interview.
i watched a masterclass by mr bill that suggested using effects in creative ways to create glitchy/interesting sounds e.g. using 3 glue compressors and 3 saturators and a few overdrives, etc. i've made some great 808 sounds this way
the only thing i learned here was ctrl + r = reverse sample, Thank You I suggest using the beats feature con the warp section to make weird tempo sliced chops or play with de redux feature while recording on another track, for record the automation
Great tips thanks ! Do you know if there is a way to record those modulation instead of writing/drawing them ? Like you can do on automation with any controller (can't find a way to map those enveloppes to MIDI so far, I'm still on live 9 btw).
0:20 Editing in Arrangement View 0:45 Clip Envelopes - Beats mode on a drum loop 3:35 Stretching Time 4:34 Clip Envelopes - Texture mode on a guitar loop 6:27 Clip Envelopes - Beats mode on a guitar loop 7:00 Adding Reverb and Delay