Wednesday, July 29, 2009

Special Guest - Stallos' Ableton Live Tips

Today's guest tip is from the UK's Stallos - one of the most popular producers on my label group.

http://www.myspace.com/stallos

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Gear List
I've got a real shoe string studio setup.
My desktop is a Intel powered PC and I have a mac laptop for DJing and travelling
Unfortunately I dont have any hardware synths or outboard effects but would maybe look to buy something in the not too distant future - maybe one nice fat analog synth!
Todays plugins are awesome!
I use ableton live as my main host/step sequencer
I use a variety of 3rd party FX
Motu Ultralite
Genelec 8030A
Macbook Pro
Vestax VCM-600
MK-461C Keyboard
UC-33e
X-Session
Faderfox LX1
Faderfox LC2
Some Fave Plugins
synths
NI Massive
Sylenth1
GeForce Minimonsta
Microtonic
FX
DBlue Glitch
Audio Damage Bundle
Antares Filter
NI Electronic Instruments 2
Production Tips - Ableton Live
As an Ableton (Ableton Live 8 Full Version)
 user I find the session view a great way to get things started.
Its so easy to get a groove going and you can throw all your plugins, loops and hits at it.
The trick is progressing things beyond the 16 or 32 bar you have going into a full track!
Its very easy to spend many hours noodling away to your groove and ableton makes things like a giant DJ mix where you keep adding loops and noises. Its a bit of a double edge sword this as for me personally i think the best sounds come out of sessioning live but you need discipline not to while away the hours twiddling the cutoff nob! I am guilty as charged!
I try to use the scene layout to create different sections for my track, intro, bass drop, main part, brekdown etc. As much as I love automation in my arrangements……..for leads and melodies you cant beat a bit of hands on action. I have my synths mapped to midi controllers and usually record multiple versions of my melody line as I mess with different synth parameters. I then experiment with my FX racks and will do another 20 or so edits with different effects applied. Then its a case of finding the best bits and splicing these togther in something cool.
Another tip is for compression. I often deploy paralell compression where I layer up the original signal with the dry signal. This works very well on drums which I typically run through 1 main drum bus channel. You can do this easily inside a rack in live, create a rack with 2 layers 1 dry and then on a second layer add your favourite compressor. You could use a wide notch EQ setting to compress just the high and low end. Then mix dry with wet til you get things soundin nice. You get the punchiness of compressed drums without losing all the dynamics.
Sends are great and I always set up 4 sends when I start a new track so I can easily apply some effects to loops and synth parts. Ableton allows you the option of feeding sends back in to themselves to create some interesting feedbacks. Watch your levels on these as its easy to create some nasty distroted speaker melting feedback. What I tend to do is then route this feedback in to its own channel and record the results. Then I can use a side chain compressor or gate effects to create some interesting patterns from the noise.
One effect I have been loving lately is the new vocoder that comes with live 8. The noise setting on this works great with snare sounds. I like to increase the noise levels over 8-16 bars and play with the release settings to create longer hits with the snare to build tension. Again get this mapped up or automated until you achieve the sound you are looking for.
Final tip, less is more! Its easy to bombard a track with lots of channels but when you are ready to render out listen to each one in solo. Ask yourself if it really adds something or is it just clouding things in the mix. You have to be brutal and lose the mad synth line you spent hours on if it doesnt quite work - not always easy so an extra pair of ears helps for this
Poor Kriece gets to hear all my shadey versions when I have overcooked things with too many synths but can be objective on what parts need to go. Instead of quantity go for quality and spend time getting your individual sounds right - you dont need much to get a strong track going.
I find sometimes going into another room from the studio where i can still hear the music sometimes helps me pick out things that dont seem right.
Get on the forums too, everything I know about ableton I have learned from the manual and the forum. All the big outfits have good forums with users sharing tips and tricks, a great source of inspiration
Perserverance is the key so just keep going!

Monday, July 27, 2009

Using Gates on Loops

This week lets start out with a really easy & useful tip on how to gate loops that I want to sample for a track.

Firstly, what is a gate?

A gate is a tool for removing sounds below a particular threshold - ie - it only lets sounds above a certain threshold "through the gate".

I use gating on loops primarily to -

1. Remove existing reverb from a loop
2. Remove unwanted background noise from a loop
3. Make a 'busy' loop a bit more sparse (ie - removing some of the quieter elements of the groove)

Here are a couple of examples -

https://www.yousendit.com/transfer.php?action=batch_download&batch_id=Y1RyYUROUnFPSHpIRGc9PQ

In example 1) I have made a busy loop a little more funky & skippy
In example 2) I have eliminated the white noise in the background

I mainly use the stock standard Cubase gate but some other really good ones include -

Sonnox Dynamics
Waves SSL Channel Strip

(feel free to add your favourite Gating plugs in the comments)

Some final points/tips -

- try gating before you try a Noise Reduction plug if you want to reduce background noise - this could eliminate the artifacts which come with any NR processing

- if you are sampling a loop you like, use gating to remove the reverb and then you can add your own in to give the loop a completely new feel

- use gating if you want to chop up a loop instead of using timestretch - it makes the hitpoints much easier to detect on the waveform

- play around with the attack, hold & release of the gating plug to get the sound you like

hope that helps :)

Saturday, July 25, 2009

My Studio

here is my current gear list -
Cubase (Steinberg Cubase 5 DAW Software)
PC
Event ASP8 Monitors
Moog Little Phatty Monosynth (Moog Little Phatty - Stage II Analog Synthesizer)
RME Fireface Soundcard (
RME Fireface 400 FireWire Audio Interface)

Anamod ATS-1 Tape Simulator
TC Powercore X8 (selected plugs- Tubetech CL1b, VSS3, MD3) (TC Electronic PowerCore FireWire 8 DSP Rack Unit with 14 Plug-Ins and 3 FireWire Ports)
Eventide Eclipse Multi-fx (Eventide Harmonizer Effects Processor)

Technics SL1200 Turntable
Evolution UC33 controller (Evolution UC33e MIDI Control Surface)

Selected VSTi - Tone2 Gladiator, Lennar Digital Sylenth1, Korg Legacy Analogue, Arturia Jupiter 8V

Here is a video intro of my studio -

Introduction

Howdy all,

I have been getting a lot of emails & myspace messages recently asking for tips or what gear I use so I thought I could save some time (I am, as you may know, inherently lazy) by creating a blog with some tips & goodies.

Here are some of the things I plan to include -
  • Tips
  • Samples
  • Some of my re-edits which are not for commercial release
I can't make any guarantees how regular this will be but will do my best.

Also, I am by no means claiming to be a production guru - in fact, I am easily the worst producer in my little circle of friends like Basek, Jeff Bennett etc. But hopefully I can shed some insight into some reasonably basic production issues.

I am trying a couple of screen capture programs so when I get one I can use properly I will do a video tutorial in Cubase.

cheers
Kriece