Our Next Event!
27May – details coming.
Interested in Hacking a Launchpad?
by Admin on May.03, 2012, under Locally, Resources
Here’s a link to a Google form -
https://docs.google.com/spreadsheet/embeddedform?formkey=dFkwa3lZbU9mLUFSSU9tWEw2WTBFNWc6MQ
We might have access to some LP’s in open box format. First come / first serve. Details as we know them – Denver/Colorado people only (this is a local hack event).
Lucky #38 Mark Mosher and AfroDJMac collide
by Marc on Dec.16, 2011, under Locally, News, Releases, Resources
Big fan here of AfroDJMac‘s work. Equally so of the work of Mark Mosher. It is only fitting that they collide for a custom rack.
This rack is based on the U-He Zebralette, the single OSC version of the Zebra virtual synth. I have started working on this synth via Mark and I am definitely impressed. Once you get over the slightly off-center approach for the user interface there is a lot that can be done.
The new rack (released today) is can be downloaded here. You will need the VST U-He Zebralette.
Example audio:
Video Support:
Some new stuff out there…
by Marc on Oct.09, 2011, under Knowledge, News, Resources
My friend Scott over at Curios Inventor and VMter.net open sourced this unit :

The Fader provides 16bit control over 16 PWM channels for LED or motor speed control via RS232 level serial, 5V TTL serial, or SPI. Completely open source--code, kicad, BOM are all below.
This sort of product, although slightly obscure in the context of this blog, is one of the many offerings that are creeping towards simple interoperability. The migration to open-source is important and to be celebrated. Keep watching!
New site to watch http://gieskes.nl/ -- I picked up on this via Oliver’s post here. Oliver was playing with an analog A/V module. Here’s a video:
There are a lot of sexy gadgetry on Geiskes site. I need to sit down and read through more.
Damian Taylor, who has quite the resume including work with Bjork on projects such as Biophelia. He has been speaking out more on what he is doing and released a Max patch. His interview on Cycling 74′s site and his Woodpecker patch.

I will give Peter the bump on this one as I have been getting news on this from all over the place. Here’s a point of entry for this paragraph. In short, Madrona Labs (think Aalto software -- visit Mark’s blog on for Aalto) has a new controller. The broad stroke goes like this:
Kinda diatonic, X+Y+Z axis, like a KP3 but sexy and with more potential. Definitely a new twist requiring time to decide what can really be done.
A video -- think about the possibilities:
More soon, cheers!
--Marc
The Meet Up Formula – 2011
by Marc on Jul.08, 2011, under Documentation, Resources
In producing presentations for our Meet Up group on Ableton and having a few years behind us here’s where we stand on the meet up formula. (subject to change)
The Three Part Approach – Beginner, Intermediate, and End Game
Beginner : A presentation for new comers to Ableton, something like warping basics, how sends/returns work, or something of that nature. This level is intended to be approachable by someone who is new to the platform and wants to learn. These presentations should allow tome for questions either after, during, or in a break out group aka “patio session”.
Intermediate : Presentations in this realm are intended for anyone with some mileage on Ableton. A perfect example of this level of presentation is Mark Mosher’s presentation on VST at our May 2011 meet up. Visit his site here to get more! A presentation of this nature should should walk the line allowing beginner Ableton users to understand essentially what is going on while also seeing the true power of Ableton available to them. At the same time experienced users may already know the topic but generally will learn something(s) new.
End Game : Get freaky! This is the best place to introduce cross platform technology, M4L craziness, fringe ideas, practices that are not main stream, and other advanced topics in Ableton and Electronic music. This topic stays pretty wide open.
Each one of these presentations we try to keep to 20-40 minutes each. Longer presentations and ideas are welcome, but can drag for those who are not a fan of the topic.
Other elements that work well – as a host or presenter – introduce yourself to everyone as talk to everyone. Be visible through the night. Nod at the dumb stuff the same as the smart stuff. Think like a politician:
“Nice doggie” (where’s a stick?)
Petting Zoo : As new controllers come available bring them in for show and tell. We did a HUGE petting zoo with 10 controllers and 7 presenters. That was intense. One or two controllers per meet up is better.
Some three years into this stuff and I still have over 50 presentation ideas in the cue! Some are easy to pull off, others require resources and collaboration. There is no end in sight!
Finally – Keep it FREE!! If people are donating their time to present entry shoud also be free – this is what builds community!
However – if there is a curriculum and a set of goals to be taught – do a workshop and charge for it! Providing lessons (private or otherwise) is how musicians have fed themselves for centuries. Ableton and electronic music is just a current itteration of music and technology. There was a time in music where the Violin was new tech.
Think about it and see everyone soon!
More on Control Voltage from Ableton – User Support!
by Marc on Jun.15, 2011, under News, Resources
User briel just sent me a message on the use of Ableton as a control voltage source for the Slim Phatty. Here is the original video:
briel asked:
… I can’t seem to figure out where the automation that you’re using in the video is. I’m assuming it’s some sort of audio effect. Do you think you could go step by step of what you did?
This is actually a lot simpler than it comes off in the video.
First off I am not using any audio effect (in the strict traditional sense). Only Volume automation. Back to that in a minute…
Volume “changes” is what the Slim Phatty translates into CV instructions. Think of it this way, the Slim Phatty is listening to the volume of your line level signal. Normally some action applied to the volume changes the level of the signal from nothing to max. In this case Ableton (or any DAW / similar program) will change the volume for you via automation (an instruction set) . So the Slim Phatty is ‘listening’ to the loudness of the modulated and now incoming (to the Slim Phatty) CV signal aka volume.
I know it sounds weird, but using a broad stroke explanation -- CV and volume are the same. Speakers move via a modulation of voltage (passed into an electromagnetic system). Loud speakers need an amplifier. The amp takes the weak and wimpy Line Level Voltage and adds more juice to the signal (amplifies). This line level voltage is how volume is expressed in an (non-amplified) analog system (such as loud speakers). This is the same voltage used for the Slim Phatty CV inputs.
This is generally an industry standard and is also why headphones and audio players all operate the same and can be swapped as needed. So your Denon Mixer will provide the same output signal (voltage and modulation) as my Echo Audio interface for Ableton -- they are all Line Level!
I am moving fast and sloppy on Line Level signal. Please go over to this Wikipedia post on Line Level to learn more and see how far I wandered.
The expected incoming CV signal should be between 0 (zero) and 5 volt (DC for the record). At 0 (zero) there is no volume on the outbound audio, at 5 volts you have full volume on the outbound audio. Outbound audio is the signal coming out of your audio interface connected to Ableton.

Ableton Master Volume
Taking the above paragraph a little further, if you were to change the master volume fader in Ableton (image to the right) you would in turn change the audible volume and actually change voltage applied to the outbound signal. So 50% volume is 2.5 volts, 100% volume is 5 volts (not that simple in reality, but close enough for the point to be made).
So the trick is volume automation -- this can come from any number of sources. The master fader, the channel fader, arrangement automation, a switch or potentiometer in the analog audio signal, or clip envelopes.
I use clip envelopes. Here’s the fast walk through for a wave file. These steps are almost identical for MIDI, synth, VSTi’s:
- Click on a “cell” aka audio clip in session view
-

One Audio Clip Selected
-
- View the clip wave form (shift+tab is the shortcut to toggle the 2 views)
-

Clip Details
-
- Click on the “E” to access the envelope properties of the clip.
-

Envelope Properties
-
- Select “Clip” then “Volume”from the drop downs
-

Clip->Volume
-
- Modulate the envelope as you wish (pen tool or normal tool, each has pros and cons)
-

Envelope Modulation
-
- Route the track now modulated to the correct output to use as Control Voltage
-

Route to CV input
-
That is it.
The envelope modulation will change the volume aka voltage in the outbound audio signal following the clip envelope instructions. Clip envelopes are used because they are easy to trigger from Ableton and allow you to manipulate much information in a simple encapsulated unit.
Some important tips!
Don’t get fancy. Get this dialed in using a solid noisy over driven wave form. Then apply the envelope. This will allow you to hear and feel the cause and effect cycle of this exercise. If you use wimpy samples (quiet) or want to use natural dynamics wait until you get the VERY LOUD ENVELOPE MODULATION UNDER CONTROL!
Don’t waste time on effects. They don’t have the impact here like you may be used to. They will only effect the volume in the scope of the Slim Fatty. I am not saying NO to effects, but there is little need to stress your CPU for CV (generally)
Make your early attempts SIMPLE! Seriously -- there is a lot of silly things you can do wrong that will make this fail. Once you “get it” you will never forget!
Work with Pitch or Filter CV inputs first. They are the most easy to hear in the system. Get the basics under control first. Understand your levels, know your gear.
YES! You will need one channel per CV output! In my example(video above) channel 1 and 2 are the Left/Right stereo mix. Output channel 3 is the CV signal (a wave file with clip envelopes applied)
Hope that helps!
Link to example file/project (Ableton 8.2, good back to 8.1.3)
--Marc
Simple Envelope Tip for Difficult Loops
by Marc on Jun.10, 2011, under Knowledge, Resources
I reworking some Beastie Boys classics I found a track that was perfect but the 8 measure loop I liked was not so friendly.
When the sample folded back to the beginning there was a noticeable loop repeat – volume and tone change. Here is one easy solution to the problem using Ableton’s clip envelope. In this case, just the volume is modulated.
The method is nothing more than using a 1/4 note deepening envelope “divots” at the end so when the loop folds over the volume and tone change does not become noticeable. Take a look :

Now take a listen to the finished track via this Soundcloud sample:
This simple method can save considerable time in avoiding a larger fight with the loop in reconstruction, massive envelope etch-a-sketching. This loop is not perfect (yet) but this easy technique can move a mix ahead very quickly.
–Marc
DJNSM
Mid May Tech Roundup – circkets chirp
by Marc on May.16, 2011, under Knowledge, News, Resources
Monday morning, a few hundred feeds are piled up in the RSS reader ad what do I find?
A whole bunch of iPad related “stuff” (hardly of note as the iPad is just a toy).
Of the few notable articles:
Android is adding all the basics into Android for music production. This is a significant jump ahead of Apple (who can indeed offer USB Class compliant control but chooses to not modify the developer relationship -- it’s pretty complicated). So head over and visit Peter Kirn at CDM for the full article. Of note is some Sparkfun references and the IOIO (yoyo) project.
Ever heard of Soundtorch? I may have….? Here’s the point of entry I hit today. This is a use of the C.A.S.E. code set (Computer Aided Sound Exploration). Watch the video :
Soundtorch follow up question. How will this work on my sample library? (warning -- seems to be Windows only).
FREE Nintendo Rack for Ableton.
Livid adds more connections to the Block and an Ipad version. Here’s a nod to the Gearwire coverage. Via Livid’s site. How about a picture?

More holes to stick it in here!
And finally -- FREE PATCHES in our NEW REPO! -- details.
Ableton User Group Collective Patch Library downloads available on GitHub (free)
by Admin on May.16, 2011, under News, Releases, Resources
Ableton Colorado User Group in conjunction with DJNSM/Datamafia** are proud to implement a free and open source repository of Ableton patches!
For those who don’t want to read and only want the patches – click HERE and download a *.zip
Is this a first? Hard to say – a search of the repo brings up results, all sorts!
So what is GitHub?
GitHub is a hosted SAAS based on Git. Git is a popular version control system for programming (or nearly any digital data). Git was written by Linus Torvalds (creator of Linux) with the desire to increase the quality of version control software.
Version control is very common and popular in the programming arena. As software is created a “commit” action is performed where the current state of the software is placed into a repository (as a binary file typically). That “version” is now available for download. Later (minutes, hours, days, or weeks) another version is “committed”. This allows the user to retrieve the earlier version as well as the new version. Simple huh?
In other words, this is like saving before the mob boss in a video game. If you fail you just load up your earlier “save point” (aka commit) and start over again.

This is a very minimal explanation of Git and repositories. I have already seen people glaze over. No need. Click here and “download” a *.zip.

A time moves on and new versions are added, old versions can be accessed (downloaded) and the full history is kept with the iterations.
Some other coolness on version control:
Binary differential : As you go from version A to Version B the repository (by nature) only “stores” the differential between the commits. An example:
File A contents “ABBA”
File B contents “ABBAC”
The commit for File B reads “File A and add a C on the end”.
In the example that does not seem like an efficient way to go. When you have thousands of lines of code it is awesome. In this system are the tools to debug and improve code that a modern application can not live without!
Fork and parallel development : In many cases developers can fork a repository and develop independently. These new developments can be merged back into the master trunk. This is how people build ideas into programs. I am not going to get too deep on the various minutia of version control. In short, everyone reading this article, as well as 99% of human existence uses something that is developed in version control.
Some links on GIT:
- http://git-scm.com/ : The main point of entry for the project
- Wikipedia entry also good reading distributed revision control
- GitHub
The benefits are grand for people who need to log and analyze software developments. I really don’t have enough time or patience to explain all of my love.
Drawbacks : There are a few – let’s focus on the general user who knows little on the topic:
- Command Line Based : There are GUI’s, they are slower – better to learn commands and commit and manage directly
- Way more friendly on Linux and Mac (*nix kernels)
- Need to know how to manage your data very well.
- Not for a casual user looking to create back-ups
- Not a back up system
So far we have patches from Mark Mosher, Chase Dobson, and me. They include some Deadmau5 Operator patches, some sound design patches for live performance, glitch effects, and more.
DOWNLOAD
Check out the wiki introduction, pages, and download.
** I credit myself as I keep the lights on (I pay for my accounts), write the wiki, test the patches, and maintain the repo. Help is welcome. Let me know!
Technology Roundup April 2011
by Marc on Apr.21, 2011, under Knowledge, News, Resources, Video
Let’s see what is happening out there!
Looks like ribbon controllers are coming back in style. I have Stribe Duo in my arsenal. Very cool. Specifically in how you can control variables in a way not available with other types of control surfaces. However, via CDM, comes an article on a DIY Arduino based ribbon controller. Included is a video:
Those of you looking for mo’bettah control or at least a change in the ergonomic nature of how you control data, consider ribbon a good bet.
Ad the DJ culture changes and declines (by some metrics) new things are happening. I recently began working on a an Allen and Heath Xone Itch controller as a MIDI control surface for Ableton. There is a lot of potential for these units to be used outside of the intended scope of design. Here is another one hitting the market (via GearJunkies).
This unit has a certain new sexiness. I am definitely interested in helping push the transition form “Wheels of steel” to “Square Pusher”. Any DJ who wants to step up the game is welcome at my door.
Mark over at ModulateThis! has a new post highlighting an install and methodology. In short he is using a “9box” approach.
This is generally a derivitive of my “Platter” system. The 9box is a 3x3 grid, the Platter system was originally a 4x4 grid and now 4 wide by n tall (using MIDI Remote Scripts allows for variable height).
In short, Mark has standardized a method to interact with Audio Cubes in an improv, teaching, and performance environment. Please visit the site for all the details and to learn more.
MLRV is out. And so is version 2.2. Here is a thread on Monome.org.
David pointed out how the new Max4Live features should be included in a tech round up. And right he is, so here is a (handy dandy) video:
Samplers and loop-packers read Peter’s article here. Good stuff and don’t forget about the cross links.
Give it away, give it away, give it away now!
Oliver chimes in on posting music. A good read and considerations for any musician. Don’t forget how this underscores the changing state of music and the business.
Open source music creation. Thx Peter!
Korg Monotribe (and more) from the’ Messe:
I avoid the iPad hype. But a few things are worth mentioning. The Gorillas limited edition of the iPad Electribe is kinda fun. Oliver picks it up from here…
DON’T BE LAME AND USE WIRELESS TO CONTROL YOUR SET! Boom -- another solution!




