Check out the abletoninc youtube page for some great tutorials.
The best thing i can recommend (and what i tell my students) start with just audio (warping, launching clips, making audio)
then midi
then fx
then production
more production techniques
and always get someone else to master
if you are djing, simply do a couple of mixes then expand with samples etc
Great advise!! There’s so many different things you can do with Abelton, but a large portion of it you don’t really need, especially just getting started.
I’ll soon have a VCI-100 (already got it at 1.4), Launchpad and LPD8 (coming soon) as MIDI controllers.
My hope was to use Ableton as a live DJ tool, using other people tracks, having all my cue points set etc, as well as able to incorporate my own, or even parts of my own creations, into a mix.
I’m hoping to use the Launchpad as is. Use the VCI-100 in a custom mapping as a “real” DJ controller, for jogs, crossfader, volume etc as well as some effects. Then use the LPD8 as a sampler, looper and effects controller (having the many parameter knobs giving the ability to tweak any effects to death pretty much on the fly).
I’ve used Cubase and Nuendo years ago as a basic home demo recording tool, but not really used anything for a while so I feel a steep learning curve ahead!
The main VST you’ll need is Massive. That coupled with Operator and you can make pretty much all sounds you’ll need. I’d suggest buying drum sample packs, in particular the Deadmau5 Xfer pack and the Vengeance pack.
Another thing you need to understand with Ableton is it’s not your traditional DJing software. There aren’t cue points in the tradition sense of the word and there’s no jogging in the traditional sense either.
With that said, you’re going to absolutely love Ableton
that’s a wall many people (including me) have run into. you have an insane amount of things to try, but learn using them one at a time. once you’ve got the hang of the workflow in general, everything else is play - but a lot of preliminary work is involved and it’s gonna take a while before the results are satisfactory. you have to be ready for this - but this goes for any DAW and DJing software anyway, so I’m kinda stating the obvious here.
oh yeah, if you’re just starting out - don’t be afraid of the lessons and the manual. the folks at ableton did an excellent job with those, familiarize yourself with them to get a solid basic knowledge. reverse-engineer the demo sets to understand how a particular effect was achieved. for everything else, just google “whatever you want to do” + “tutorial”