User Manual
Table Of Contents
- Welcome to Live
- First Steps
- Authorizing Live
- Live Concepts
- Managing Files and Sets
- Working with the File Browsers
- Sample Files
- MIDI Files
- Live Clips
- Live Sets
- Live Projects
- The Live Library
- Locating Missing Samples
- Collecting External Samples
- Aggregated Locating and Collecting
- Finding Unused Samples
- Packing Projects into Live Packs
- File Management FAQs
- How Do I Create a Project?
- How Can I Save Presets Into My Current Project?
- Can I Work On Multiple Versions of a Set?
- Where Should I Save My Live Sets?
- Where Should I Save My Live Clips?
- Can I Use My Own Folder Structure Within a Project Folder?
- How Do I Export A Project to the Library and Maintain My Own Folder Structure?
- Arrangement View
- Session View
- Clip View
- Tempo Control and Warping
- Editing MIDI Notes and Velocities
- Using Grooves
- Launching Clips
- Routing and I/O
- Mixing
- Recording New Clips
- Working with Instruments and Effects
- Instrument, Drum and Effect Racks
- Automation and Editing Envelopes
- Clip Envelopes
- Working with Video
- Live Audio Effect Reference
- Auto Filter
- Auto Pan
- Beat Repeat
- Chorus
- Compressor
- Corpus
- Dynamic Tube
- EQ Eight
- EQ Three
- Erosion
- External Audio Effect
- Filter Delay
- Flanger
- Frequency Shifter
- Gate
- Grain Delay
- Limiter
- Looper
- Multiband Dynamics
- Overdrive
- Phaser
- Ping Pong Delay
- Redux
- Resonators
- Reverb
- Saturator
- Simple Delay
- Spectrum
- Utility
- Vinyl Distortion
- Vocoder
- Live MIDI Effect Reference
- Live Instrument Reference
- Max For Live
- Sharing Live Sets
- MIDI and Key Remote Control
- Using the APC40
- Synchronization and ReWire
- Computer Audio Resources and Strategies
- Audio Fact Sheet
- MIDI Fact Sheet
- Live Keyboard Shortcuts
- Showing and Hiding Views
- Accessing Menus
- Adjusting Values
- Browsing
- Transport
- Editing
- Loop Brace and Start/End Markers
- Session View Commands
- Arrangement View Commands
- Commands for Tracks
- Commands for Breakpoint Envelopes
- Key/MIDI Map Mode and the Computer MIDI Keyboard
- Zooming, Display and Selections
- Clip View Sample Display
- Clip View MIDI Editor
- Grid Snapping and Drawing
- Global Quantization
- Working with Sets and the Program
- Working with Plug-Ins and Devices
- Using the Context Menu
- Index
CHAPTER 15. RECORDING NEW CLIPS 203
15.3.3 Overdub Recording MIDI Patterns
Live makes pattern-oriented recording of drums and the like quite easy. Using Live's Impulse
instrument and the following technique, you can successively build up drum patterns while
listening to the result. Or, using an instrument such as Simpler, which allows for chromatic
playing, you can build up melodies or harmonies, note by note.
1. Set the Global Quantization chooser to one bar.
2. To automatically quantize the notes you are about to record, choose an appro-
priate value for Record Quantization.
3. Double-click any of the Session View slots in the desired MIDI track (the one
containing the Impulse or other instrument). A new, empty clip will appear in the
slot. The new clip will default to a loop length of one bar, but you can change
that by double-clicking the clip and changing its loop properties.
4. Arm the track.
5. Launch the clip.
6. The notes you play are added into the looping clip, and you can observe your
recording in the Clip View.
7. By default, the Control Bar's Overdub switch is activated, so that you can build
your pattern layer by layer. However, if you would like to pause recording for a
moment to rehearse, you can deactivate the Overdub switch. The contents of
the clip will continue to play, but you can play along without being recorded.
When you are ready to record again, simply turn on the Overdub switch.
8. Stop recording by pressing a Clip Stop button or the Stop button in the Control
Bar.
Note that holding
Alt
(PC) /
Alt
(Mac) while double-clicking the empty slot to create
a new clip will implicitly arm the track and launch the clip.
At any time while overdub recording is going on, you can use the Undo command to remove
the last take, or even draw, move or delete notes in the Clip View's Note Editor.
Note that you can also add notes to existing Session clips while the Overdub switch is on.










