Ableton Vs. FL Studio: The Ridiculously Comprehensive Guide

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I spent over 40 grueling hours making my first Ableton track after 17 years of FL Studio. So, how to they stack up? (Timestamps below!)
Learn about everything from music to physics for dirt cheap, and support this channel in the process with CuriosityStream! www.anrdoezrs.net/click-88436...
TIMESTAMPS
0:00 - Introduction
3:40 - History
8:56 - Rules and hardware setup
11:04 - Day 1
31:40 - Day 2
36:47 - Day 3
41:24 - Day 4 (I didn't sleep)
51:58 - MY FIRST ABLETON SONG
54:27 - Ableton Pros
58:18 - Ableton Cons
1:05:25 - Which is best for new users?
Special thanks to Mr. Bill for the Ableton help, and he's actually learning FL Studio at his own pace! Check out his channel (and music): / @mrbillstunes

Пікірлер: 1 500

  • @stannylou1636
    @stannylou16364 жыл бұрын

    The most important lesson to learn is regardless if you use FL Studio or Ableton underground rappers are still going to ask for free beats.

  • @pw6002

    @pw6002

    3 жыл бұрын

    Everybody will still be asking for free beats, music, sounds...! 🤣🤣🤣

  • @fiirasmusic5366

    @fiirasmusic5366

    3 жыл бұрын

    collab with them!!

  • @txddyfarquh3916

    @txddyfarquh3916

    2 жыл бұрын

    Someone PLEASE Pin this post 😆 this summed it ALL up haha

  • @vtprlab262

    @vtprlab262

    2 жыл бұрын

    Amen!

  • @Shdnfncidjen

    @Shdnfncidjen

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@fiirasmusic5366 honestly. People are confused about how much their beats are worth. Just send em out and build relationships with people.

  • @Draakie100
    @Draakie100Ай бұрын

    I used to have a Cubase setup but my mom got terminally ill and I had to take care of her 24/7 for almost 6 years which cost me almost all of my savings and belongings. Now I want to get back into music production and I have been torn between FL and Ableton. I have been searching for answers for quite a while and I did not get much wiser....untill now. I thank you for "making the skies clearer"....and taking away a lot of "the clouds". Thank you for the information, and I wish everybody a healthy, happy, and wonderful life 🙏

  • @badinibeats5939
    @badinibeats59394 жыл бұрын

    you use fruity loops and your girlfriend reviews cereal seems suspicious

  • @breakfastwithnic6024

    @breakfastwithnic6024

    4 жыл бұрын

    Very

  • @AnDy-of3mj

    @AnDy-of3mj

    4 жыл бұрын

    Valid point

  • @Squarion

    @Squarion

    4 жыл бұрын

    Soulmates

  • @ultrasupreme9312

    @ultrasupreme9312

    4 жыл бұрын

    Fruit loops, FL Studio goes ✋ to ✋

  • @invisiblecrowe

    @invisiblecrowe

    4 жыл бұрын

    *wife

  • @AndrewSouthworth
    @AndrewSouthworth3 жыл бұрын

    I feel like the simplistic plugin interfaces and relative simplicity of their function is largely due to Ableton Live being designed around live performance. That insanely fast audio quantization you came across, you can set up Live to automatically quantize loops during a live performance, so even if its a little off during recording when it loops back it will magically be in time. Also while probably not suited for your writing style session view is one of the best features of Live due to its ability to prototype arrangements (and perform) - you can basically sketch up a bunch of song segments, test out a bunch of song structure and layering and then record from session view into arrangement view and then fine tune your track in there. The thing that really pulled me to Live 3 years ago in the first place was Push 2, because the integration between Push and Live is insanely seamless - i've never came across any piece of hardware that integrates so nicely with a DAW. You can make entire tracks without even looking at the computer, but you have all the power of Ableton Live in the hardware. Prior to Live I used Logic for around 10 years and while I still use Logic for some stuff, Live is where I write 99% of my stuff now. Awesome video dude!

  • @blainejones5409
    @blainejones54092 жыл бұрын

    I know you can't read all these comments, but I was so impressed by your musicianship, and prowess as a composer. You are really schooled, and good. I'm glad you let the DAW speak for itself.

  • @AdamJayTechnoElectro
    @AdamJayTechnoElectro4 жыл бұрын

    Benn, this was a very fun video to watch. I cut my teeth on music software with both Opcode Vision and Fruity Loops in 1998, but for the last 17 years I've been a hardcore Ableton Live user.... starting the world's first Ableton Live User Group in 2005, working the 2006 Ableton booth at NAMM, and working as the technical editor for the book "Live 4 Power!" Your warnings for "Ableton users and fans" made me laugh and put me a little on guard, but still, it was a joy to watch you figure out Live and come to your own conclusions. I especially liked seeing the various unique interface features and quirks through your fresh perspective. Stuff that's beyond second nature to me now was once a thing I also had to figure out, and so watching you figure it out took me back. This was unexpected. Thanks for taking the time to make and share this. Your remarks about modulation and the piano roll made me realize that the clip envelope pane is something I just go to all the time without even thinking about, and because of it, doesn't even feel like it is separate from the piano roll, but a layer on top of it that I use for parameter locking. Your perspective definitely made me think about a lot of things I do in Live without thinking about.

  • @StevenClements

    @StevenClements

    3 жыл бұрын

    I started on the Atari with Edit Track and SMPTE Track then onto Cubase on the Atari... then Cubase on Windoze... and LIVE on Windoze which was really hard to get my head wrapped around. I didn't even look at Fruity Loops. I kept up on Cubase and then focused more on LIVE and moved to OSX and eventually dropped using Cubase - even though I still have it installed. I never piano roll anything and have zero interest in drawing notes. LIVE works well my only issue is the poor sysex support and I really wish I could label my audio ports

  • @turbulancemusic4830
    @turbulancemusic48304 жыл бұрын

    dude i've been using ableton for ages and it's crazy how much you learn watching someone go through the basics of the daw. you forget all the important stuff after a while trying to learn all the neat/novel features of the daw. this was insanely informative, thanks for the vid

  • @MusicalBasics
    @MusicalBasics2 жыл бұрын

    This is really interesting for me as an ableton user, I never considered FL studio, but as a pianist my work has always been piano roll based rather than sampling based (which is where Ableton really excels). So, thanks

  • @nicolasencarnacion3393

    @nicolasencarnacion3393

    Жыл бұрын

    FL piano roll is decades beyond any other daw tho

  • @Music-tg5is

    @Music-tg5is

    Жыл бұрын

    "Piano roll based is where Ableton really excels?" ... You don't know what you're missing, mate - See at: 58:18. Even fans of other DAWs cencede that FL Studio has the best Piano roll of any DAW ... by a country mile!

  • @MaxUgly

    @MaxUgly

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@Music-tg5isI having been using FL since Fruity Loops 5. Throughout the years I have tried all kinds of different DAWs. I did have a lot of fun and was inspired by Reason and it's workflow and stock instruments. In the long run I ended up just using it as basically a VSTi pack via Re-Wire... FL has always just felt more free and sandboxy, not just piano roll but also the project sequencer

  • @jj4l

    @jj4l

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Music-tg5is They said Ableton excels at sample based editing not piano roll / midi events.

  • @jj4l

    @jj4l

    Жыл бұрын

    @@MaxUgly 100% agree, Do you use FL in Reason or do you use Reason Rack in FL?

  • @Lewp77
    @Lewp77 Жыл бұрын

    I am an ableton and pro tools user but the new FL21 is insanely dope. I'm going to use it way more now.

  • @scottvincent770
    @scottvincent7704 жыл бұрын

    FL's Piano Roll is perhaps its strongest feature (a thing of beauty) but the overall workflow is maddening along with Midi routing (Mulab is the easiest I've seen in that dept).

  • @abelramirez7320

    @abelramirez7320

    4 жыл бұрын

    Used mulab for 3 years as my first daw and I really enjoyed it

  • @1on1z3d

    @1on1z3d

    4 жыл бұрын

    FL's Piano Roll is the best Piano Roll amongst all DAWs, period. Well, that's all about it honestly. It's lacking workflow and efficient functionality all the way from creating a simple fade out on an audio clip to more complex techniques like side chaining or M-S EQing. Cpu efficiency is still shit compared to other DAWs (just try adding a Fruity Balance on 20 mixer channels and watch your cpu rising to 10-15%). And I swear to god I'm sure the consolidation/bouncing function is both too complicated compared to the one-click-function in other DAWs and also not accurate at all. Probably I'm not selecting the right settings but that just proves my opinion of FL's functionality and workflow being stupidly complicated and non sense in most cases.

  • @yasunakaikumi

    @yasunakaikumi

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@1on1z3d I got a ryzen 2700 cpu and I did what you said about rising CPU from 10-15% it only did 3% on mine. what kind of 4$$ crap CPU you are using there lol... also FL Studio is modular not linear like most DAW out there the way it handles multi core is not the same as your conventional DAW... here is something to educate your brain how it actually works, so you have 1 track but you want to route it to track 2 and 3 that has both delay and reverb EQ etc... so if you route that track to those 2 tracks do you think it will function like it will compute it in multicore? yes or no? if yes then you are just stupid and doesnt even understand what Computer Science is. if no then you sure know what you are doing. because what it actually does is it only compute within 1 core (or lets just say 1 thread) from track 1 to both track 2 and 3 where you route 1 track at... because it's physics, a cpu thread must wait for track 1 to compute so it can compute the next FX chain VST you have, it's not possible to compute it in parallel thread or cores. thats why every routing you made in FL Studio has consequence of being CPU hog because you are not doing it right, if you does the same thing like link only 1 synth per track (linear way) then it should do pretty much the same as performance as other daw. ALSO before I drop the mic, 3rd party VST plays a role on how it performs in DAW, not all will perform equally because some VST programmers are just lazy to test it out on other DAW.

  • @svensvensson8102

    @svensvensson8102

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@1on1z3d Difficult to side-chain in FLS? Throw a fruity limiter on thw target, route the source, adjust the knobs. Really? M-S EQ, 2 minutes in patcher (but I would prefer it built into Parametric EQ 2) or use Maximus if you don't need detailed tweaks. Simple audio editing could be better though, agreed.

  • @fiirasmusic5366

    @fiirasmusic5366

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@svensvensson8102 i think we should talk about routing and groups not sidechain haha

  • @maxk880
    @maxk8803 жыл бұрын

    FL Studio is great, Ableton is great. Both are great. It doesn't matter at all which one you're using. Every single genre has producers who use either one of those. I've just both and I felt that I could be more creative with the Session view in Ableton (which is totally undiscussed when he talked about Ableton's ''lineair workflow"'). But I liked FL studio too

  • @drlexus814
    @drlexus8144 жыл бұрын

    honestly i pirated fruity loops back in the day when it was new. i liked it, and when i had money to spend on these things i bought it. and i wasnt disappointed. its my main daw.

  • @homebrewinstrumentals7700

    @homebrewinstrumentals7700

    4 жыл бұрын

    Same story here 😎👌

  • @oliverislost

    @oliverislost

    3 жыл бұрын

    I did the same thing!

  • @igorbeuk6298

    @igorbeuk6298

    3 жыл бұрын

    I have Been there and I actually learn to adopt new things like using all other DAW because music is in me, it's stupid to run discuss about which DAW is better when we all know that it is about user and Art in every one of us and don't forget if you are like guy in video he actually represents him self almost as of topic narcissis talking about he unable to think with basic logic and just do what you want it's that easy in Ableton because of best screen view and usage of space it is very easy... everything is in front of you...that modular behind is so expensive that you have to ask yourself a question is he want to say something else but he hides behind been a honest and difference between..FL could not run Audio track no vst from other 3party until they get big help from Steinberg and they pay as all others do. If you what to use VST in Logic without any trouble try to find Nektarine it comes with Nectar T series and keyboard is one among the best if not best in quality build aftertouch is so amazing that I discovered a new dimensions of sound and I used a lot of " great keyboards" midi and sinth's midi and nothing can compare, Nektarine can mapped every music software and it already have maps so for example I have not kontroll over Kontakt and Reaktor than from NI hardware, encoders and Faders are build to last for a long and you can twist them and still after 5 years p1 become a legend midi device while on the other side I used M audio ,Alessis , NI and novation and nothing even stands to Nektar and Nektarine is a couple mb in size comparison with AKAI solution or NI Wich is a big potential but luck of quality build make me sad so I use it with gentle care and in past with fear of jumpy encoders ect but I remember Arturia making top quality products but they to made a cheap solution without thinking about users having stupid problems like keybeds fel apart or anoyng jumping encoders and my point is that we have to really think what we buying and what brand to choose, NI gives a plenty of sounds but eventually it will break just buy using is . My experience show me Nektar and Nektarine and you can control literally everything you want from T series on Maschine you can just buy using it come to unbelievable results but you have to handle hardware with a lot of care almost TLC

  • @coolscube5062

    @coolscube5062

    3 жыл бұрын

    IT WON THIS YEAR PIANO ROLL DAW OF 2020 PLUS OTHER STUFF !!! I use my fl studio most days

  • @livinghere1972

    @livinghere1972

    3 жыл бұрын

    Yep. Weird how piracy can actually make the company money if the product is good. Same with movies etc. You want the real deal.

  • @vedro4
    @vedro44 жыл бұрын

    Been using FLS for 3 years. Tried Ableton 2 days ago... As a house producer I can't describe you the relief I felt about arranging the track, and much more.... Ableton is awesome!!!!

  • @arturzaduryan6108

    @arturzaduryan6108

    4 жыл бұрын

    house producer, nuff said ;p

  • @FrameData1990

    @FrameData1990

    4 жыл бұрын

    I make trap,fl is for kids,they all download the same mixer presets and all sound the same

  • @Scars_on_my_nose

    @Scars_on_my_nose

    4 жыл бұрын

    Frame Data let’s collaborate

  • @FrameData1990

    @FrameData1990

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@Scars_on_my_nose sure if you want post your SC

  • @FrameData1990

    @FrameData1990

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@dystopia-0616 i blame neither,its up to the user to decide how far they want to advance

  • @kidsonicofficial
    @kidsonicofficial3 жыл бұрын

    1:03:15 yes it does, you need to right click the pan parameters and click "Select Split Stereo Pan Mode"

  • @Music-tg5is

    @Music-tg5is

    11 ай бұрын

    Is that a remembered global setting?

  • @Zer0Spinn
    @Zer0Spinn4 жыл бұрын

    I love how this thing started just as I felt confortable on ableton. I used FL for 5 years but now I'm using maschine and ableton and man, it was a trip. Now I can sit back, enjoy your suffering and scream shortcuts at the screen lol

  • @beam4547
    @beam45474 жыл бұрын

    7:37 Hey! FL-Chan was NOT a bad idea!

  • @user-cn4qb7nr2m

    @user-cn4qb7nr2m

    3 жыл бұрын

    OOOH dissed ma waifu! Burrn, you, Benn!

  • @Luvutoo
    @Luvutoo3 жыл бұрын

    2021 and my university shamed us FL Studio users into buying Ableton :^) I like both, but the stigma is really outdated and unnecessary in a timeline where GarageBand might be many people's first introduction to digitally making music

  • @michaels5166

    @michaels5166

    3 жыл бұрын

    I would use what the hell I want and dare anyone to open their stupid mouth about it.First of all,if I buy it or if it''s free,it's my computers,my time,my energy,and my own workflow that matters.I'm really big on being outside of the box and experimentation,along with simplicity.Maybe that is because I have an actual background with hardware,and instruments,instead of just jumping to a computer first.I think comparisons,like MAc or PC is so stupid,and I use both,and other platforms.

  • @Ms-pr7fe

    @Ms-pr7fe

    3 жыл бұрын

    did you go to university for music ?

  • @michaels5166

    @michaels5166

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@Ms-pr7fe NO i studied instruments,performed,and learned about gear from us not having roadies.I am school trained in computers and yes,I have my own project studio setup..

  • @Znop

    @Znop

    2 жыл бұрын

    Same here, a lot of classmates shamed me (and still do) for using FL, it's nothing that gets to me because when you use something for a long time you're obviously going to think something else isn't as good (and it's just humour between us to make fun of anything we do). What shocked me the most was that a lot of the tutors at my college were also shaming me for using FL when I could blatently tell they had no idea what it had transformed into. These tutors still thought FL was in its beta drum roll stage and I was surprised that people who were supposed to be guiding me through music hadn't actually been updated on a major DAW. It even got to the point where one of my tutors actually had to ask me what DAW I was using while he was watching me compose some tracks, really put it into perspective that they had no idea what DAW they were talking about when they shamed me for using FL.

  • @samnene

    @samnene

    2 жыл бұрын

    Damn bro I can’t imagine having to buy Ableton as a uni student. As I am a music hobbyist I bought FL because of price n what if offers for that price. I’m a uni student that is scraping by. Hope you got your money’s worth 🙏

  • @nomad1517
    @nomad1517 Жыл бұрын

    Both programs are god tier. It's like comparing a Green Beret to a Navy SEAL. One excels in a specific field than the other. Ableton was made to perform electronic music live on a laptop and produce music at the same time. Because back in the day, it was so expensive to perform electronic music, and you had so many limitations. FL studio's brilliance was in the fact that you can have a work flow that works for you instead of something restrictive and also how easy it was to make music because of it's sequencing abilities. So both are as Ben said "anti DAWs." Same thing with Reason as well, the rack and the graphics made the change from hardware to digital easier because the software looked more like a studio rather than a DAW. But the real question is: what DAW should I use? What are you trying to do in your career? If you are a wedding DJ that hates the same boring shit day after day, Abeleton is god. If you want to perform a actual song using synths without breaking the bank, Ableton is your pal. If you are broke asf and you want a daw you can jump right into, FL studio is your homie. Both DAWs allow you to go as deep as the universe will allow. I've heard some people actually have gotten their Phd in music using Ableton, it goes that deep apparently. But yeah. Don't get stuff if it hinders your dream. Like, if going DAWless stops you from achieving your vision, you need to compromise or find a good work around. These are tools, they are made to help you get to point A to point B as fast as possible. Anyways, that's my point of view.

  • @qoup22
    @qoup223 жыл бұрын

    Great video, thank you for taking the time to make this. Recently picked up Ableton to mess around with making electronic music, appreciate reviews like this.

  • @rikkistarrett307
    @rikkistarrett3073 жыл бұрын

    This is one of the best vids I've ever watched. I went form FLS (7 years) to Ableton this summer and went through all these frustrations, with a LOT of headaches and a lot of Google used. It's so funny being on the other side of this mad learning curve...

  • @robertsyrett1992
    @robertsyrett19924 жыл бұрын

    no link to the cereal channel in the description.

  • @Lilll3

    @Lilll3

    3 жыл бұрын

    !!!

  • @Lilll3

    @Lilll3

    3 жыл бұрын

    need

  • @cuttingaway123

    @cuttingaway123

    3 жыл бұрын

    So

  • @vraisairs9201

    @vraisairs9201

    3 жыл бұрын

    I can’t find it

  • @-........

    @-........

    3 жыл бұрын

    it's a pun i think in case you missed it ;) fruity loops

  • @7Wounds
    @7Wounds3 жыл бұрын

    Definitely subscribing to this channel. I used to produce in FL Studio and stopped about a decade ago. Not with FL but producing ... life happened. And now i'm kinda getting back into it on a therapurtic/hobbyist level I think the last FL I used was maybe 11? But it was probably before that even, so i'm learning it all over again because 20 is so different. I was also considering learning another DAW like Abelton or Studio One. I've really enjoyed playing with Maschine as that was the tool the made me kinda curious again. That ramble is all to say that the phase i'm in with music this was VERY entertaining and inciteful to watch. I look forward to exploring more of your content and learning quite a bit. Thanks for doing this it made Abelton way less intimidating. I still dont know it's for me especially at the pricepoint (FL Gang is definitely spoiled on free updates hahaha) but I find myself with way less hangups about it after watching this ... for what it's worth.

  • @tapdaddy69
    @tapdaddy69 Жыл бұрын

    Ngl, I am straight up vibeing with this channel rn fr fr. Thank you for your hardwork on these videos. They're great. Thanks

  • @phliip7362
    @phliip73624 жыл бұрын

    Well done for engaging in an authentic way and giving an honest appraisal. Props 👏👏

  • @pip3guy
    @pip3guy4 жыл бұрын

    that problem you were having with the non 4/4 bars was weird. I track and mix my prog band in Ableton and it's always fine with odd meters

  • @PantaFlux

    @PantaFlux

    4 жыл бұрын

    That’s weird indeed. I now tried to reproduce this behavior deliberately for about half an hour to no success. :-D

  • @jonytube

    @jonytube

    Жыл бұрын

    Disk error, look at the overload icon on the top right. Defo some weird stuff but it was disk related

  • @Xottapchenko

    @Xottapchenko

    Жыл бұрын

    Thank god, I was quite scared of it being a general Ableton thing bc I have to switch to Ableton from FLS

  • @lyingpancake95
    @lyingpancake954 жыл бұрын

    It's impressive that you picked it up so quickly. No one should be expected to ever jump into an unfamiliar DAW without some sort of guide.

  • @cullenmacgillivary6669
    @cullenmacgillivary66694 жыл бұрын

    So glad to have a professional talking, it’s hard getting into the music industry with out a lick of knowledge and watching a KZreadr who only has 6 months of knowledge. Thanks for the video!

  • @sanzansansan
    @sanzansansan4 жыл бұрын

    One of the best in depth explorations i´ve seen on his subject. Subscrining, and trying fruity loops right now.

  • @roy4286
    @roy42863 жыл бұрын

    EVERYONE SHOULD CHECK OUT THE DARK THEME IN THE PREFERENCES IF YOU HAVE PROBLEMS READING THE INTERFACE.

  • @agitat0r
    @agitat0r2 жыл бұрын

    I've been an Ableton user for about 8 years. I want to get back into FL, and seeing how you at times struggled with Live is almost as instructive as Mr. Bill's point of view. Understanding what you miss is inspiring, in a way. I wholeheartedly agree with one of your points: the DAW influence how you sound - it's an instrument, and learning other DAWs help you evolve as a producer. My first real DAW after trackers was Cakewalk, and I've been using Cubase extensively, as well as Acid and FruityLoops/FL Studio quite a bit as well. I think I carry something with me from all of them.

  • @charleswheeler3418
    @charleswheeler34183 ай бұрын

    I love this so much. I just discovered you and I love what you're all about after watching a few of your videos. As an Ableton user who still struggles after years of use I love this. It still feels like yesterday that I was having the exact same frustrations. Ableton was my first DAW and the only one that I've stuck with but it was a massive headache for absolutely years mainly because I couldn't figure out the different views and then recording with clips but not knowing about the yellow button on the top right for god only knows how long and being so mad that I couldn't hear my recordings without the clips playing at the same time 😆

  • @pip3guy
    @pip3guy4 жыл бұрын

    also excited to see you delve into wavetable. by far the most complex Ableton synth

  • @illestvillain1971

    @illestvillain1971

    4 жыл бұрын

    Yea that'll be cool. Also Hi Pipe Guy 👋

  • @mikaoleander

    @mikaoleander

    3 жыл бұрын

    ayyy it's the pipe guy o7

  • @LeadSwitchKick

    @LeadSwitchKick

    2 жыл бұрын

    Only if it had a noise generator. :(

  • @Lokua
    @Lokua3 жыл бұрын

    This was insanely painful to watch but still interesting. One of Ableton's biggest strengths and indeed what set it apart from every other music production tool from the beginning is its Session view, so it was pretty tough to watch someone completely ignore that almost immediately while simultaneously zeroing in on its weakest points (linear arrangement). Session view allows an asynchronous approach to production and there are other features that build on that like modulation panes - everything you can see on any device has its own modulation pane per clip, and these can be in any meter - separate from the clip. This style of working is more like a modular synth than a DAW and was designed for **Live** (hehe) performance of electronic music where you want to bring parts in and out on a whim, but is also a more efficient way of recording an arrangement. A scene of clips is equivalent to a "pattern" in your FL workflow, I think? Anyway. This video has inspired me to look more into FL, as I've heard great things about its MIDI editing before and also perhaps the built in synths are stronger... (not a fan of needing VSTs and don't love Albeton's synths).

  • @iutisteli4726

    @iutisteli4726

    3 жыл бұрын

    Bitwig also has session view...

  • @shayneoneill1506

    @shayneoneill1506

    3 жыл бұрын

    Yeah I think if you use Ableton, you have to use it as Ableton, as a pattern based thing. I use Ableton half the time If I want to do something in a pattern based way, and Studio One if I want to go linear. There are definately some reasonable critiques made here. Abletons piano roll IS terrible. I mean how many years have we been waiting for *propper* transposing.The idea you just highlight and drag only really works if your going up and down an octave. And yeah the expensive updates hurt. But I can't make heads and tails out of fruity loops. Which is a shame, it does sound powerful. I just get bamboozled when tying to use it.

  • @willia_music

    @willia_music

    3 жыл бұрын

    What makes me laugh is the people who are hardcore ableton users and don't even use the session view. Same people who lay their drums out manually as audio clips

  • @obamatypebeat

    @obamatypebeat

    3 жыл бұрын

    Ableton < FL Studio 😂

  • @hendrik6156

    @hendrik6156

    3 жыл бұрын

    It also depens on the music genre you want to make.

  • @sks1795
    @sks17953 жыл бұрын

    I think you should make an updated video consider Live 11 was released. They made MASSIVE improvements to the piano roll, plus I think Ableton's piano roll has much more of a learning curve than FL's. The "focus" function, the pencil tool, and automation envelopes are all baked into the piano roll in addition to the new humanization functionality.

  • @caseTelevision
    @caseTelevision2 жыл бұрын

    Great review, I’ve been an Ableton user for a long time. Really appreciate your criticisms. You make a good point about the Max crutch.

  • @cooperradke3774
    @cooperradke37744 жыл бұрын

    I just want to say, props to you for sticking it out. I would like to add that the time I have spent learing ableton in and out like the back of my hand has shown me that I can now open any DAW and go straight to it but my first time before ableton using FL I found it cluttered, navigating through the oddly shapped tabs seemed like I was using a childs toy. Now, don't get me wrong, FL is fantastic and I always recomend to friends to try three or four different interfaces before deciding which is best for them personally. Coming from a musical background I just never felt FL stood out as an interface that looked and felt the way I personally needed it to. People get frustrated when starting any DAW but the point is to be and if you are dedicated and love making music then you put the time in to learn all the ins and outs. This proves to an artist wether or not they have what it takes. It should never be simple and not frustrating at times, you will never learn from easy. With that being said thanks for a video that's not wah wah wah this is better than that bullshit. Everything that's different will present challenges. My advice (as mentioned earlier), get all the free trials for all the different DAW's and find which flows best for your brain. Remember it's your brain and creative mind that drives the DAW not the other way around.

  • @mountshrinelindsheaven9259
    @mountshrinelindsheaven92594 жыл бұрын

    As a Ableton Live user for 10 years, I 100% agree with your pros and cons about the DAW!

  • @basilcooper995
    @basilcooper9954 жыл бұрын

    Useful tip: Automation has recently become very powerful in edit mode. Not pencil mode! So if you want constant values, curves and ramps, even perfect sinewaves and a simple ADSR shape, all with precise timing, press B, drop the pencil and have a look at the 10.1 release notes. You can even attenuate, ramp in and out, and time-scale whole sections of automation pretty easily, so the lack of fancy curve types doesn't matter when you can edit thousands of automation points at once. Honestly, as an ex-FL user, I miss the whole "automation as clips" concept, being able to move any parameter freely and attenuating automation clips with other automation clips was a big plus for complex evolving sounds. I've been thinking of recreating that type of timeline in Max, probably just for automation, it would be a great addition to Ableton.

  • @istvanbracz
    @istvanbracz Жыл бұрын

    Benn, I just love your vids, as an long time LIVE user- you rock...really...made my day, thank you!

  • @ImpulseGenerator
    @ImpulseGenerator4 жыл бұрын

    fantastic video! I make plunderphonics music so Ableton is pretty much a big sampler for me. Inspirational how you get so deep into detailed programming of variations and velocities.

  • @B1SCOOP
    @B1SCOOP4 жыл бұрын

    For years I've used FL, time to time tried Ableton, but after my SSD died last year, I've chose to get something different, and ended up with Reason. The DAW has it's strict limitations, but I think it's what makes it helps you to focus on the project. It's especially fun tool if you're into hardware synthesizers, but cannot afford none. Entire UI is basically 2d simulation of 90s synth hardware studio, where you can even manually change the audio and CV routing.

  • @Anci3ntRobot

    @Anci3ntRobot

    3 жыл бұрын

    dude same exact thing happened to me !!!!! I been using FL for years almost 10 years maybe then I got into more experimental things and more electronic stuff Tried to learn ablton 2 of my dope friends and workers showed me reason and I bought Reason late 2019, Im loving it hard , but I dont like its piano roll and a few clunky stuff but rack itself and devices which is Rack Extensions ( Instruments and Effects and utlities ) are amazing and the modular enviroment , but Im trying to use it as a plugin now cause I think I can benefit better daw enviroment with my legendary Reason Racks , so its gonna be FL , Ableton , and Bitwig ! probably all three but mostly Bitwig then Ableton and then FL Studio lol

  • @CyberneticArgumentCreator
    @CyberneticArgumentCreator2 жыл бұрын

    I think some of the things in Ableton you considered cons, like the compact nature of the UI for different patches and effects, are pros for me. I very highly value information density and my screen space, and I like for everything I'm working with to be on the same screen as much as possible. I don't like working in a window that covers up a large chunk of my screen any time I am editing a parameter of an effect or instrument. I think the biggest consideration for use of any modern DAW software is speed of workflow for YOU. Whether it's because of the UI, or routing, or workflow, or maybe simply because you learned one software first, it really doesn't matter. Like "if it sounds good, it IS good" but for DAWs. Whatever works best for you... is best for you. Kind of solipsistic, and that's fine. Imagine trying to determine "what is the best guitar" in any objective manner. I think it's the same here. I will say I like the functionality of fades and crossfades and automation thereof in Ableton. It's a small thing, but it "makes sense" to me and I can get things the way I want them to sound intuitively and quickly.

  • @draztiqmeshaz6226
    @draztiqmeshaz62263 жыл бұрын

    For you to pick this up and so quickly make THAT is amazing to me, and I've been using various music softwares since Acid 2.0 Excellent discipline.

  • @red240red2
    @red240red24 жыл бұрын

    Great vid. Trying this ableton trial and totally agree! I use the fl studio piano roll so much especially when traveling so it has been a major con for me. I hear some telefon Tele Aviv influences in there, keep it up man!

  • @6400ab
    @6400ab2 жыл бұрын

    I never understood the hate for FL Studio. I remember getting a cracked copy of it back around 2007 and loving it. Sure the work flow was different than traditional linear DAWs back then but once you got your head around it it was really well designed and encouraged a lot of experimentation and creativity.

  • @ZombieLincoln666

    @ZombieLincoln666

    3 ай бұрын

    You just said it yourself - it’s associated with newbies pirating it

  • @gorkemgulan
    @gorkemgulan4 жыл бұрын

    19:17 your reaction to quantize is priceless. Half quantize is also cool to keep a bit of the vibe. I wish i could play the bass..... and that ableton had pitch correction! I use vocalsynth 2 for pitch correction.

  • @tangibleblockofwisdom6386

    @tangibleblockofwisdom6386

    3 жыл бұрын

    It’s primarily stufff like this that means it’s ableton or nothin, in terms of not having to stop writing or composing to deal with the flailing minutiae of 2 personally escorting two notes to where they need to be. Trying to not kill a jam with workflow issues inherent in all daws is the only reason I can’t toss or ignore the prospect of ableton

  • @SpacedOutDoonie
    @SpacedOutDoonie Жыл бұрын

    The song came out dope bro. I Iiked the glitch pattern you made, thats some really crazy work there the reverbs and delays sounded really good with it.

  • @IAmTheLaw67
    @IAmTheLaw673 жыл бұрын

    Ableton does have true stereo panning, you just have to right click the “pan” pot and select “split stereo panning.” It’s not well known that Ableton uses “balance” as the default, and it’s even less well known that it actually does have a genuine panning parameter! Lots of confusion around this.

  • @Yuzuki1337

    @Yuzuki1337

    3 жыл бұрын

    When I started out in Ableton, a good friend of mine had been using it for years already, this was the single tip he gave me and even though I didn't even know how to use panning properly at the time it stuck with me :D

  • @mundaemundae8597

    @mundaemundae8597

    3 жыл бұрын

    Aww that's too much to do.. fl better

  • @BenVanTreese

    @BenVanTreese

    3 жыл бұрын

    This was only added in live 10, but yeah good to know.

  • @nkozi
    @nkozi4 жыл бұрын

    Used Live for years, and it was my first ~real~ DAW - I've made maybe 6-8 dozen full tracks in it, recorded, mixed, mastered etc, and I gave it up after a long time because I found myself getting increasingly stymied by some limits it has. The panning is one of them, as is the sandboxing, but overall i felt that the basic audio recording and editing workflow didn't have enough to offer me when trying to track myself or my band, and the 12 return track limit become stifling in larger projects. Ultimately, while I still own Live and do love it for actually playing live, I moved to a combination of Bitwig and Studio One, which meet my needs for both extensive experimental environments and traditional audio-based workflows in a better way than Live was ever able to.

  • @jerricabenton842
    @jerricabenton8424 жыл бұрын

    I found out about Fruity Loops when i had the chance to visit the home studio of Rick James in 2002. That was the primary software he was using to create tracks before he died.

  • @OrangeDynamo
    @OrangeDynamo3 жыл бұрын

    I’m subscribing cuz of the loving ways you’ve mentioned your wife in the beginning of the video; I hit like cuz of the knowledge you dropped in the video. This is the first video I’ve seen of yours and I’m already a fan 🙌🏽

  • @nodoze123
    @nodoze1234 жыл бұрын

    This was a great breakdown and I appreciate this!! Thank You...

  • @natetehgreatt
    @natetehgreatt3 жыл бұрын

    Personally, I really enjoy using a myriad of DAWs. I feel as though it helps me maintain a fresh approach to music production, in addition to being able to leverage the different strengths of each DAW. FL, Ableton, Bitwig, and Reaper are my favorites. You can also use Rewire to route the audio of one DAW into another! I do this often in Ableton when I need the sound design flexibility that FL studio has over Ableton (automation). I tend to favor the arrangement workflow in Ableton over FL, so it works well.

  • @cooloutcoexist
    @cooloutcoexist4 жыл бұрын

    Fan of yours and Ableton user here. I watched the first two streams and this one, really liked all of it. I think I still don't want to buy another DAW, even though your enthusiasm for FL studio is really intriguing. This would be insane for my hobbyist approach :-D When it comes to panning in your next Ableton track, you should consider right clicking the panning knob and split the stereo channels, maybe this is what you are looking for? Anyway I learned things about you, your music and even some Ableton stuff from it. thanks for that, I enjoyed it! :-)

  • @IgnusVermaak

    @IgnusVermaak

    4 жыл бұрын

    Hey, where does Ben stream, would love to watch those.

  • @cooloutcoexist

    @cooloutcoexist

    4 жыл бұрын

    Ignus Vermaak v hey :-) for whatever reason I think I was notified about it here on KZread, watched a bit, but later had a hard time to find it again to resume watching, since the video was unlisted. I found it then, but l’m out of luck right now. So unfortunately I can’t give you a satisfying answer I‘m afraid...

  • @Hardcrafter2807
    @Hardcrafter2807 Жыл бұрын

    I will say, that song you made was an experience in itself, it felt like some insane melodic IDM/Breakcore! Really tripped me out once the drums started going nuts!

  • @mattosborne1366
    @mattosborne13662 жыл бұрын

    Great content on this channel. Glad to find it. Thanks man! Subbed

  • @xn4pl
    @xn4pl4 жыл бұрын

    Please make "Advanced FL Studio techniques for IDM production" video or even a whole series if people like it. I would really like to see how an "FL Studio power user" (no offence :) ) makes an IDM/Drill & Bass/Breakcore type of track with it. I've been using FL Studio for 4 years and most of idm production techniques i learned from others were imported from Ableton tutorials, because FL Studio community really lacks comprehensive tutorials for it.

  • @spencerselden1802

    @spencerselden1802

    4 жыл бұрын

    I would check out the KZread channel InTheMix , they have tons of very clear and deep tutorials on how to use FL studio. It has completely changed my use of the software and I've been using it for ~8 years. Highly recommend

  • @wanderer3757

    @wanderer3757

    3 жыл бұрын

    If you have'nt tried, try FL Granular synthisizer. Im using fl for 6 years and I just got to know about it a year ago. you can use it for anything. Its cool.

  • @maxine2798

    @maxine2798

    3 жыл бұрын

    See how or copy? Do it your way and you might do something original. Just a suggestion

  • @xn4pl

    @xn4pl

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@maxine2798 I do it my way and it's pretty original, but it never hurts to see how it's approached by a professional.

  • @tz4601

    @tz4601

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@maxine2798 Art is theft. "Good artists borrow; great artists steal." (Obviously not to the point of plagiarism, we're talking ideas, techniques, etc.) On top of that, seeing exactly how a pro does something is a great way to learn.

  • @BrentODell
    @BrentODell2 жыл бұрын

    I've never used Ableton, but as a long time Reaper user, when I started using FL Studio, I definitely experienced a bit of the 'too much power' or, in other words, choice paralysis.

  • @Unifono2012
    @Unifono20124 жыл бұрын

    Entertaining video as always! And I enjoyed that track a lot! I know you said you don‘t like loops but I think the unique thing about ableton is the session view. Since you love doing generative stuff I recommend looking into follow actions. As its name suggests it‘s also great for live performances with a computer. Grid controller + dummy clips, effect racks and all that stuff, make it really special... And of course as you mentioned, the way it handles audio and the max for live integration. Using it as „usual DAW“ in arrangement mode shows its shortcomings the most I guess.

  • @MikeLoverly
    @MikeLoverly4 жыл бұрын

    Ty for this, a lot of knowledge being thrown around, I appreciate it. Will probably watch this a bunch of times to pick up on your personal approaches. I should start with the fact I have been a long time ableton user but no professional. But I do know the moment when it clicked for me that there were many other layers to this program. The one strange thing about ableton is how many things are hidden right in front of you. You spoke of piano roll and sequencing but ableton really wants you to use it's multiple drum machines instead which fill those rolls perfectly. Drum Rack would have given you all the sampler features you were talking about missing. It's no comparison to the entirety of FL being a sampler but Drum Rack in particular is it's own world onto itself. For example you can put a whole drum Rack inside the pad of another Drum Rack. Which leads me to my next bit of info, modulation. The modulation in ableton is hidden in plain site in the form of macro mapping. This feature alone, way before you get into max/msp, let's yo build your own instruments through shared modulation. It's basically like building guitar pedals but digitally. You turn the rate knob of the oscillator, the reverb increases to a predetermined limit. You then save and use these little tools you've made as part of your workflow. You can even set the start file template however you want to include these new go-tos. If you want a vst channel rack to show up on every track when you start a new file, you can save the new file template that way so all your vsts, routing and/or configurations are pre done. I like to call it the Grand Theft Auto of DAWs because It's a sandbox and there is no particular workflow or path. I think this can turn folks away but once you have your ""Ah Ha" moment, you're golden. it does have it's random limitations like any daw, but that's when you download some free or cheap max/msp solutions someone else figured out.

  • @EIIjot
    @EIIjot4 жыл бұрын

    I tried the trial for Ableton and FL Studio but ended up finding Ableton more intuitive. I have no musical background, i just thought it would be fun to try mess around and make sounds, but i found it really comforting during your first stream that a pro like yourself ran into many of the same issues I did. Great video and review overall! From my experience so far all your criticisms ring true. I especially appreciate that you didn't make this into a polarising 10minute video but actually dove really deep into every knook and cranny and shared your honest opinion.

  • @MiDnYTe25

    @MiDnYTe25

    4 жыл бұрын

    I tried Ableton after 13 years of FL and I fell in love. It's infinitely better for people that like a streamlined, organized workflow and getting stuff done fast.

  • @johnnyt5054

    @johnnyt5054

    4 жыл бұрын

    I have to disagree 100%

  • @222clove

    @222clove

    4 жыл бұрын

    Exact same thing for me with picking a daw.

  • @222clove

    @222clove

    4 жыл бұрын

    ​@@johnnyt5054 it's ok to have an opinion.

  • @EIIjot

    @EIIjot

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@johnnyt5054 thats cool man, to be fair to fl studio i tried ableton for one day and fl the next day so i might have found it more confusing because i had just started getting used to ableton.

  • @kurt1717
    @kurt17174 жыл бұрын

    Around 1:03:30 mark you mentioned ableton uses circular panning. You can right click the panning knob and "Select Split Stereo Pan Mode" to adjust left/right input channels position in stereo field separately.

  • @BennJordan

    @BennJordan

    4 жыл бұрын

    I now realize I used slightly the wrong term. It's technically constant power panning with sinusoidal gain curves. Ableton's solution is to either split the channels (as you recommended) or go extreme on the panning and then lower the width with a utility device. Honestly, both of these are not acceptable solutions. That being said, I think if I were to use Ableton I'd probably get used to it after the initial gripes.

  • @CannedApplauseBand
    @CannedApplauseBand3 жыл бұрын

    I love this video so much! I am an Live user and I can see now how far I came! Thank you!

  • @stecreddington8879
    @stecreddington88793 жыл бұрын

    this is what i call a review ...benny boy u the man keep on making these content..it smooth to watch and good energy..;)

  • @Origamibones
    @Origamibones4 жыл бұрын

    As an ableton user for ~10 years I feel like you really hit all my main gripes with the software. I too like to use a lot of LFOs and envelopes on the synths because I usually want more control than ableton offers. But I've had a bit of a deal-breaker with using the M4L devices; every now and then, with no warning or way to undo it, all of the parameters on the M4L devices jump back to zero or default positions. This pretty much ruins tracks and has caused really big issues when performing live, to the point that now I pretty much only use native (non MAX) devices or samples because the reliability isn't there. My other big gripe is that they really haven't pushed any kind of documentation or tutorials on how to make M4L devices. I have so many ideas for things I'd like to do, but I don't know how to do them. I think if they're going to keep relying on M4L to fill in the gaps they need to make MAX more accessible via tutorials or documentation. Great video!

  • @RneubauerBmore

    @RneubauerBmore

    4 жыл бұрын

    I used to teach MaxMSP/Jitter and it has decades of incredible documentation built in (and if you search the Cycling '74 forum or general MaxMSP groups)! I think things turn up blank when searched specifically for M4L instead of MaxMSP as a programming environment since most discussions aren't on M4L specific forums

  • @Origamibones

    @Origamibones

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@RneubauerBmore I guess that's where I've been getting stuck is not really knowing how to target various things within ableton. But the community and documents around Max/msp itself are really great!

  • @sacredgeometry

    @sacredgeometry

    2 жыл бұрын

    What are you on about? There is extensive documentation on both live and M4L. Lives documentation is not just the best in class, it's some of the best of any software. The Max documentation literally has code examples for every single node type. The live documentation is so good that I frequently tell people who are new to production to read it even if they dont use Live.

  • @Origamibones

    @Origamibones

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@sacredgeometry I guess my comment on M4L is that Abelton often references it, but doesn't actually make tutorials or videos about getting more use out of it. Mostly you're just referred to Cycling 74's site, which is fine, but it feels 2nd class to me. Fully agree that Live's documentation is amazing, I've read the manual front to back and it was so useful! Basically I was just hoping that they would extend that into the M4L area more since I think they could do a great job introducing people to it and then if you wanted some more to dive into Max full on. With more direct support I think it could be way more valuable to everyone. These are just my thoughts, you're welcome to have your own view

  • @raulsantana1801
    @raulsantana18013 жыл бұрын

    Very fair! The piano roll is the reason why bitwig split from ableton. I remember when everyone tried to get into the bitwig beta.... It was nearly impossible. Hence why very few people know of bitwig

  • @kokidchaz4790

    @kokidchaz4790

    2 жыл бұрын

    I thought bitwig was good, you don't like piano

  • @PamSesheta
    @PamSesheta3 жыл бұрын

    Cool video! I’m only a few minutes in. I’m a long time FruityLooper and so SO tickled to know The Flashbulb uses my preferred DAW! This is timely for me as I’m considering learning me some ableton.

  • @diedforurwins
    @diedforurwins4 жыл бұрын

    loved this man, I really appreciated your trying ableton

  • @kimmiesrhythms
    @kimmiesrhythms4 жыл бұрын

    This was painfully scary for me to watch lol. I bought fl studio a month ago and still learning. But just like you I tried Ableton live last year and I was just lost. Fl studio feels more natural although I’m still learning. But I’ve just purchased Ableton suite as I now have an Ableton push and I have to learn Ableton now. So this was both like painfully scary and yet encouraging at the same time. Thanks for sharing this!

  • @thelanavishnuorchestra
    @thelanavishnuorchestra3 жыл бұрын

    Thanks, that was a very interesting watch. I've never been able to wrap my head around Ableton. It's UI just doesn't gel for me. When I first used FL Studio, back when it was Fruity Loops, it was immediately exactly what I was looking for. I've been a Linux user for the last 10 years, and have switched to Bitwig, which is also a great DAW. Maybe not FL Studio great, but it's powerful, quick and easy to use and has a decent piano roll. I do miss being able to ghost another track behind the one I'm editing, but I get by. I also love that Bitwig has support for working with outboard modular gear.

  • @itsd0nk
    @itsd0nk4 ай бұрын

    I love this. Very cathartic for me. I started music in fruity loops 3 back in 2000 when I was 13 or 14. I became a crazy power user over a year or so. I learned most of the advanced stuff by reverse engineering the demo songs. I also hid the fact that I used FL. I had also used pro tools and cubase for mixing and mastering anything with live instruments. I eventually got talked into switching to ableton by my big brother after a hiatus from music for a couple years. Even after using ableton for many years and learning all of its tricks I still despise its piano roll interface and how the transport controls behave. It violently gets in the way of my creativity. Switching back to FL was like a fish returning back to the ocean.

  • @AdamUpMusic
    @AdamUpMusic2 жыл бұрын

    That was a cool review man, thanks. :: Deciding between the two to start recording (Ableton) & creating (FL): the path has been chosen. 🙏🎶🏝🎯

  • @joeparkhurst57
    @joeparkhurst57 Жыл бұрын

    man... I know the difficulties! Taetro made a video that shows how to use Ableton and it's about the same age as your demo of Ableton. Taetro really explains everything and a lot of the issues you are experiencing are fully explained. I moved from Audacity for recording vocals into a DAW and I choose Ableton. I haven't recorded with it yet, and I've owned it for about 2 weeks now... lol it's a hobby of mine and this weekend I am hoping to record. I know vocally... Ableton is 100 times better than Audacity lol I'm old... I'm analog and reel-to-reel old... lol

  • @myke.p
    @myke.p3 жыл бұрын

    Cons of FL from an FL user: 1. You can't do anything in Playlist/Arrangement without getting channel rack in between. Record anything in Playlist and it gets stored in Channel Rack. This adds too much clutter in your project. Imagine recording 70 vocal takes, all getting stored by a random name. And when you delete it from the playlist, it doesn't get deleted from the Channel Rack and then you have a very good time clearing up your project. It just kills the fun process of recording and makes me concern about the clutter. 2. Audio recording and editing is the most weak part of FL studio. There is no option to fade in fade out in playlist. Getting recording in your desired track number is tedious. When you edit your sound in Newtime or Newtone, you can't make a permanent changes to the original file, you need to drag a copy of the edited file. It also adds more and more clutter in Channel Rack. 3. Every FL Stock plugins looks beautiful but the UX sucks. Harmor is the coolest looking synth I've ever seen but when it comes to learning that, it takes hours and it is not easy on the eyes. Tons of buttons are all over the place. Whereas learning Serum is way more easier, why? because the UX is very carefully designed. 4. There is few clicks here and there in every task. When you make a good piece of music, you need to route it to the mixer then open the mixer and navigate to the track and only then you can add FX. Whereas in Ableton, you just press Ctrl F and find the effect and straight up drag and drop. 5. The shortcuts of FL are weird and not much usable. i.e. F9 is mixer, it is out of my left hand reach unless I lift it.

  • @piotrmunnich5240

    @piotrmunnich5240

    3 жыл бұрын

    @Mike Parmar There's something like 'route to channel rack after recording' box or something like that you can check/uncheck. About shortcuts: I feel comfortable about them in FL, like old Korean players in Starcraft are used to defaults, before release of Remastered version of the game few years ago, which enable to customize them. Hopefully, Image Line will implement this feature of setting YOU OWN shortcuts in next releases ;)

  • @heyy8969

    @heyy8969

    3 жыл бұрын

    I don't mind the shortcuts actually. I guess after using the same shortcut for so many years it just feels normal. However i wish FL Studio's pitch shifting didn't sound like shit, would be nice to have Complex, Complex pro modes from Ableton and more options when manipulating audio. Most of the options in the sampler are useless for me, i only use normalize when i need to make something louder lol and different stretching methods can sometimes make it sound even more shitty, so i usually stick with "resample". For me Decklicking mode is ok for very short fade, but usally i use IN and OUT in the sampler for this. It would be nice to have skins for FL20, like Ableton has, because working in the same Dark Grey UI can get uninspiring after some time.

  • @lesslethalmusic

    @lesslethalmusic

    2 жыл бұрын

    Use Tools>Macros>purge unused audio clips to clear the channel rack 🤙🏻

  • @ivansoto9723

    @ivansoto9723

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@piotrmunnich5240 That would be really cool. I would by a mouse with macros just for that.

  • @Motekk67

    @Motekk67

    2 жыл бұрын

    To number 1: you can delete audio on the Playlist it's very simple and even deleted from the channel rack... You can see every audio track on the left side of the Playlist... Same with patterns and automations... If you don't see it, maybe it shows the pattern or automations... There is a button to switch between above it, called picker button ... Or just click the audio track, then it's highlighted on the left side... There you right click and delete... No channel rack is needed and it's just also deleted there... To number 2: you can easily make fade ins and out on audio clips in the Playlist... It does not work on midi pattern i guess, can't find the option... But with an audio clip just click the item on the left side of the audio clip to open the menu.... Go to automate and the choose volume or panning... There is an automation clip now right on the audio clip and you can make fade in and out or even pannings... It's just a different way than in other daws... But it's awesome for when you use impacts or reverses bc'z you can also pan them or just make volume automations in between and everything is in place

  • @dwmichaels
    @dwmichaels3 жыл бұрын

    ok - so you got me with "this shits hard". Nice to hear that from someone with skills. I can really appreciate how easy people can make creating music in a DAW look.

  • @midigek
    @midigek4 жыл бұрын

    Thanks for the video, and I realy like your experimental way of making music. It,s inspiring and want to try some things for myself. You make many great videos and from time to time your channel popsup by searching on KZread. Perhaps because we are both searching for experimental ways to make something sound different ?! You make great and fair/trusting reviews !

  • @damionmortenson84
    @damionmortenson844 жыл бұрын

    Oh man! I so felt how he feels. First rule of Ableton editing: Consolidate before you hate!

  • @PantaFlux
    @PantaFlux4 жыл бұрын

    40:15 If with ‘ghost notes’ you mean seeing the notes of two (or more) clips overlayed you can do so by CTRL-clicking additional clips.

  • @peach_total
    @peach_total Жыл бұрын

    this is a neat concept. it would be cool getting a little video series of ppl who are very advanced in different DAWs to teach each other

  • @eyevenear
    @eyevenear4 жыл бұрын

    No way! I first watched the spot "Evolution" on the early KZread when I was a teenager, after all these years I find out you made the music on that, what a trippy circle!

  • @yoyofargo
    @yoyofargo3 жыл бұрын

    Honestly, the audio world needs a development model where creative individuals are flown in for a collective project, where the developers are in-house working alongside them, listening for feedback on how to improve UX or even full feature requests. Something similar to the Blender Institute, where they are able to operate on donations, merchandise, software-training, where the software is open source and available for everyone.

  • @understanding77

    @understanding77

    Жыл бұрын

    That would be cool, kind of like the linux of music software

  • @andesneko
    @andesneko8 ай бұрын

    I wanted to learn a new DAW and I was between FL Studio and Live. I am soooo glad I went with FL Studio. I had already tried both and hated them, but after seeing this I am sure I would have suffered more with Live this time around. FL is weird but I'm getting used to it.

  • @broketunez
    @broketunez4 жыл бұрын

    I love your humor throughout this!

  • @Unit27
    @Unit273 жыл бұрын

    Having a lot of fun watching this. As a Live user and instructor it helps a lot seeing where the program might not be intuitive for a brand new user. At 47:42, it might be easier to edit the automation with Draw Mode off. This would let you make a time selection, and by placing the mouse below the automation line, it will highlight blue. That way you can pull that segment of the line to the desired value and it will create the automation points necessary at the edge of the selection. Also, pressing the + button at the bottom right of the Automation Parameter selection space will send the currently selected Automation lane to its own lane, allowing you to show more than 1 Automation lane for each track.

  • @damiencalloway
    @damiencalloway4 жыл бұрын

    Okay, I must know: does the whiskey go good with the cereal ?

  • @honeysucklecat

    @honeysucklecat

    4 жыл бұрын

    A really strong scotch, like Laphroig, and shredded wheat is quite the thing. Give it a try, let me know what you think. You use the Scotch like a dipping sauce. Never done it myself, but sounds good.

  • @illestvillain1971

    @illestvillain1971

    4 жыл бұрын

    I love how this is the first comment I see in this comprehensive guide lmao. So unrelated

  • @carlosdrfx

    @carlosdrfx

    3 жыл бұрын

    Whiskey IS cereal!

  • @justaverage5327
    @justaverage53274 жыл бұрын

    Coincidentally I found this on August 22nd, just thought I would note this.

  • @josiahshaver9423
    @josiahshaver94234 жыл бұрын

    This guy is the lovechild of David Cross and Vanilla Ice and I couldn't be more happy about that. Subscribed.

  • @jivexero
    @jivexero3 жыл бұрын

    This was ridiculously comprehensive. And I'm glad you did it.

  • @beaujaymes75
    @beaujaymes753 жыл бұрын

    My opinion, when producer 9th wonder produced for Jay Z on the "Black Album", He solidified Fl Studio in the hip hop community.

  • @slickonthebeat22

    @slickonthebeat22

    3 жыл бұрын

    FACTS

  • @beaujaymes75

    @beaujaymes75

    3 жыл бұрын

    @Miles Prower I was guilty of that until they incorporated the compatibility of a midi controller. I was all in when that happened

  • @koikal951
    @koikal9513 жыл бұрын

    I think the thing with ableton workflow, atleast for me, is that you should sketch your sound on the clip view, arrange them into to scenes (intro, verse, etc) and record it Live (like the name Ableton Live) by triggering the clips or scenes. When im done with the backbone of my song that is when i go to arrangement view and record solos or other melodic stuff. Then master the whole things.

  • @Tx66
    @Tx663 жыл бұрын

    I absolutely adore his bass progressions. My God it’s so fucking beautiful. Gonna binge all of his music now

  • @blacklightgod6264
    @blacklightgod62644 жыл бұрын

    Thank you sir, great to learn Ableton (I'm coming from Reaper) alongside you. Feeling confident moving forward!

  • @gorkemgulan
    @gorkemgulan4 жыл бұрын

    15:39 yes slightly frustrating to shout “headphone logo” to a screen hahaha

  • @somaticjet2717
    @somaticjet27174 жыл бұрын

    fl studio is mad crowded for a single monitor imho.

  • @stefanslater8342

    @stefanslater8342

    4 жыл бұрын

    I found that until I got a single ultra wide where you can really make use of the layout of fl studio

  • @somaticjet2717

    @somaticjet2717

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@stefanslater8342 ah cool yeah i bet.

  • @WillCMAG

    @WillCMAG

    4 жыл бұрын

    I had a habit of using it on two or more monitors. Then again I had a workflow where I was using the short cuts or enter key on certain windows.

  • @xn4pl

    @xn4pl

    4 жыл бұрын

    idk, i'm fine using it on 1380 x 768 laptop, except some 3rd party huge VSTs.

  • @vak2586

    @vak2586

    4 жыл бұрын

    You can detach any fl studio window and then drag it onto any other monitor with a button in a dropdown menu!

  • @fmartin09
    @fmartin098 ай бұрын

    The track you cut was actually very good. It sounded a bit like what Thom Yorke is directing his music towards. Very creative and sounds organic. Good job!

  • @ashwillnel
    @ashwillnel4 жыл бұрын

    I'm also a first user of Ableton in 2020. Mad FL user for 20 years amongst others you were mentioning at the begin. On the topic at time stamp 32:00 - Apparently every recording needs to be done in the second view window when pressing "TAB" Not the one you're in at the time stamp. From what I understand learning Ableton, an audio/midi strip in the second view window acts as a "Pattern" in FL Studio. So I'm using it as such and record everything into the 1st window. It's works at it should, haven't ran into problems since. I'm still learning Ableton hard to work on collabs with clients. All thanks to the lockdown forcing my hand in doing so.

  • @be4udie03
    @be4udie033 жыл бұрын

    I went to school for audio engineering/beat making. I was taught by a handful of well-known professional producers how to make beats and mix and master. I didn't get the hint when we NEVER used Ableton that FL was the way to go. Before going to school I had always used my pirated version of Ableton, so when that version stopped opening on my computer after a year of neglecting my musical interest, I naturally BOUGHT Ableton for $750. I've been watching videos on everything to refresh my memory and stumbled upon a YTer that uses FL Studio who made a video about the plugins that come with the DAW. I started comparing FL to Ableton... this is when I found your video. I'm not halfway through this video, 6 shots of rum, and I feel like I'm going to have a dent in my forehead by the end of this. THE SIGNATURE VERSION OF FL STUDIO IS $450 CHEAPER THAN ABLETON LIVE AND COMES WITH BETTER PLUGINS THAN THE ONES I HAVE BOUGHT TO COMPENSATE FOR THE LACK OF EFFECTS PROVIDED BY ABLETON. I hate myself. I hate myself. I hate myself. I hate myself. I hate myself. I hate myself. I hate myself. I hate myself. I hate myself. I hate myself. I hate myself. I hate myself. I hate myself. I hate myself. I hate myself. I hate myself. I hate myself. I hate myself. I hate myself. I hate myself. I hate myself. I hate myself. I hate myself. I hate myself. I hate myself. I hate myself. I hate myself. I hate myself. I hate myself. I hate myself. I hate myself. I hate myself. I hate myself. I hate myself. I hate myself. I hate myself. I hate myself. I hate myself. I hate myself. I hate myself. I hate myself. I hate myself. I hate myself. I hate myself. I hate myself. I hate myself. I hate myself. I hate myself. I hate myself. I hate myself. I hate myself. I hate myself. I hate myself. I hate myself. I hate myself. I hate myself. I hate myself. I hate myself. I hate myself. I hate myself. I hate myself. I hate myself. I hate myself. I hate myself.

  • @Leo9ine

    @Leo9ine

    2 жыл бұрын

    Someone please introduce this poor soul to the wonders of piracy

  • @nigeleverdidge82

    @nigeleverdidge82

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@Leo9ine he legit said that he pirated ableton

  • @nigeleverdidge82

    @nigeleverdidge82

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@Leo9ine he legit said that he pirated ableton

  • @diedforurwins
    @diedforurwins4 жыл бұрын

    ive been an ableton use for 12 years, never seen that issue with the second chunk of audio not starting its SO weird!

  • @stevengonzales9870

    @stevengonzales9870

    3 жыл бұрын

    I’ve had a Similar issue since I’ve downloaded it. Maybe it’s a computer issue

  • @AndrewSouthworth

    @AndrewSouthworth

    3 жыл бұрын

    I've had that issue a couple times, but it turns out it was related to the hard drive the samples were stored on because it never happened again after I upgraded drives.

  • @TagetesAlkesta
    @TagetesAlkesta10 ай бұрын

    As a software engineer with zero experience in music production this video will be extremely helpful in facilitating my transition from VS Code to Neovim.

  • @jameshoy380
    @jameshoy3803 жыл бұрын

    As an intermediate Ableton Live user; this video was an absolute delight to watch and inspiring to dive into the software further. I’d be curious how you feel about the DAW 6 months later.

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