Ableton is one of the most unique music studio software
applications around. From its recording and production capabilities to
its overall interface and design, Ableton is unique and has helpful
recording features.
If you are new to Ableton Live 9, a built-in tutorial on the right
side of the work window will guide and teach you the program’s features.
This tutorial will show you how to create beats and record audio, among
other lessons. It’s nice that there is a built-in tutorial because
Ableton can take some time to get used to.
The Ableton Live 9 interface is matte gray and has a flat look. There
are two main windows in Ableton Live 9. The arrangement window
resembles the arrangement window you’ll find in just about every digital
audio workstation (DAW), except the track information sits on the right
side of the arrangement window instead of the left. Time still goes
from left to right like in other DAWs in the arrangement window view.
Unique Session View for quick, intuitive composition, flexible performance and improvisation
Multitrack recording up to 32-bit/192 kHz
Nondestructive editing with unlimited undo
Powerful MIDI sequencing of software and hardware instruments
Advanced warping and real-time time-stretching
Unlimited Instruments, Audio effects and MIDI effects per project
Group tracks
VST and Audio Unit support
Time signature changes
Multiple automation lanes
Track Freeze
Automatic plug-in delay compensation
MIDI remote control instant mapping
MIDI output to hardware synths
MIDI Clock/sync
ReWire
Multicore/multiprocessor support
WAV, AIFF, MP3, Ogg Vorbis, FLAC file support
System Requirements
Intel® Mac with Mac OS X 10.5 or later, or PC with Windows XP,
Windows Vista, Windows 7 or Windows 8; Multicore processor; 2 GB RAM;
1024x768 display; DVD drive or broadband internet connection for
installation
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