i have been thinking about trying the ableton live intro free for 30 days, and maybe purchase it for 99 bucks if it works out well for me, my goal are to remix tracks and turn them into tech house or minimal etc. am i going on the right direction here?
i’m going to download the 30 day free trial this sunday, and spend 4 days of my spring break on it. maybe 8hrs each day or all day or actually i would have to take breaks in between to study for exams. but yeah i’m going to test drive it
you could always jump on a gate way sequencer like reason or fl studio - make your own “tech house or minimal” tracks in there cause honestly until Melodyne Editor accomplishes it’s goal of breaking tracks into stems, pulling out (for example) vocals only, to attempt make a “minimal” remix is pretty futile. yet if you make a bunch of sick tracks when capable of extracting isolated parts to mix you will have stuff to work with.. in any case learning any DAW will further your knowledge with in production game & hands down Ableton is the most respected in the DJ world, thou using something like Fl studio will grant you quicker access to whipping shit up - it’s work flow is a lot easier to learn.. if you do just jump right to Live they have a bunch of free tutorials via youtube, under user name: “abletoninc” leaning it in side and out can’t do you wrong.
check out the tom cosm webiste and tutorials, some great stuff there. with ableton, the user base is large enough where you will find youtube tutorials as well. i personally would download it now, if you can do even 20 mins a day until your break, those days off will be ALOT more productive.
there was a good blog entry here (search main page) for how to make remixes if you don’t have the stem tracks (seperate drums, vocals, bass, etc.)
it might be confusing to start out thinking remix remix remix, and not really understanding the basic concepts of a DAW, and additional song composition.
there is a good series of videos call “in the studio with ____” I think the ian carey ones are good starting points.
the demo version of live doesn’t allow you to render or save your work as wavs. there are vst recorders that you could use to bypass this for the demo, but that is something that should be taken into consideration. with intro you are going to run into the effects/vst limit of intro very quickly if you can’t render the effect to wav file and then use the wav file(to free up that effect).
thanks and i understand that i will be expecting limitations. but for the 30 day demo, i mean i would just really use it to test my strength, ability, pressure and my limits. and i succeed in all 4 then i could possibly consider purchasing it for 99 bucks and hold on that dj equipment for a bit till i become well familiar with ableton live intro. if i get the full version of intro, i should be able to record/save files right? and maybe more features in the intro versus the demo of the intro? yeah i also like the fact about the tutorials all around which is one of the reason for going forward with it. and yes i will think tomorrow about considering your 20minute a day thing during class.
everything you get in the demo is the same as when you buy it. and you can save when you download the demo, for 30days just sign up and ableton.com then download the demo from the site and it will save your log in as a key chain each time you load it up. After 30days you cant save/export.
But if you want to produce/remix what ever you will find intro frustrating when you start to hit the device limits, you can allways re-sample things when this happens and its really cheap and a great place to start. But if you want to see what ableton can really do then just get the demo of Live 8 check out cosm.co.nz for all the vids you need to learn.