YoVDO

Producing Drums with Ableton Live and Drum Rack

Offered By: Udemy

Tags

Audio Engineering Courses Music Production Courses Ableton Live Courses Mixing Courses Audio Effects Courses Sequencing Courses

Course Description

Overview

A comprehensive overview of how to use Drum Rack and how to produce better sounding drum kits in Live.

What you'll learn:
  • Create custom drum racks in Ableton Live.
  • Sequence drum patterns.
  • Produce professional sounding drums.

This is a comprehensive overview of Ableton Live's Drum Rack taught by Ableton Certified Trainer, Alec Ness (su na). This course will cover all aspects of the Drum Rack and how to use it's features.

We begin by walking through all the different sections of the device and discussing how it works with the interface of Ableton Live. We then cover "clips" and how the program handles MIDI data. Through the primary lectures in the course we discuss the Simpler device and how to add your own drum samples to your projects. We'll cover sequencing drum parts with those samples, then automating effects and parameters to make them unique. Finally we finish the course with layering and mixing your sounds together in order to end up with a clean, well-mixed drum sequence.

The course includes about 2 hours of video content, and will take an estimated 3 hours in consideration of following along and creating your own drum sounds.

The content covered is applicable for any genre, and can especially be useful for:

  • making beats
  • hip hop
  • house
  • trap
  • future beats
  • other types of electronic music

After taking this couse, students can expect to understand how to use drum rack in their own productions and understand the basic concepts of mixing drums.


Taught by

Alec Ness

Related Courses

Play With Your Music
Peer to Peer University via Independent
Introduction to Real-Time Audio Programming in ChucK
California Institute of the Arts via Kadenze
Sound Synthesis Using Reaktor
California Institute of the Arts via Kadenze
Designing Synthesizer Sounds
Berklee College of Music via Kadenze
Real-Time Audio Signal Processing in Faust
Stanford University via Kadenze