Our Next Event!

27May – details coming.

July 13, 2010 – “I hear Your Signals” was heard

by Admin on Jul.13, 2011, under Documentation, Locally, Releases, Sounds

Mark Mosher - another visionaryOne of the primary goals in the Ableton Colorado User Group and all of my (Marc) activities is to raise awareness inside the growing genre of Electronic Music. I know that everyone gets more than their fair share of Facebook invites, Twitter messages offering a free iPad, and so on. This is very much a distraction when trying to find where the good work, innovative people, and real blood and sweat has been invested in music.

In my travels I see the best musicians often keep the smallest crowds. Some of them break (Bela Fleck for example), but this is rare.  The juggling of the true art form and promotion and marketing is difficult.

Mark Mosher continues to do an exceptional job at producing intelligent and valid music while maintaining a solid social and professional standing inside the realm of music, most particularly electronic music. I have had the opportunity to learn from him over and over again.

So it was one year ago today when Mark Mosher released his second album “I Hear Your Signals”, a follow up to “REBOOT”.

These are complimentary works in the science fiction Signals Universe concept album series. They are a story of alien invasion. “REBOOT” addressed this story line from the human point of view and the following album, “I Hear Your Signals” spoke form the alien perspective.

2 albums, 1 saga

I have frequently played both albums during our Meet Ups, as I keep these works on my portable devices.  His “Sounds from a Distant Outpost” Ableton Live pack is an exceptional work and has contributed to a few of my personal creations. All of these releases are of a similar theme and I have nothing but respect for people who create a vision and idea and then spend years, sometimes decades, creating the body of work.

Do not forget how Mark is an important blogger and resource in electronic music.  This genre is often considered the genre of [insert format you love or hate here]. House and Techno variants fill the large clubs,  Dub-Step is a current rage, Drum-n-Bass will always be around, people will continue to argue of what IDM constitutes, the dark and noise music will continue, and people such as myself will enjoy what technology has to offer and engage in pushing the envelope.

Mark Mosher on the other hand works as an electronic musician – a creator of sound and music.  His knowledge and love of sound and synthesis is coupled to a solid musical background and experience the predates laptops and computers as the Lingua franca* in music.

So we celebrate the Mark’s work and look forward to his next chapter.

I salute him and his dedication.I thank him for his knowledge and contributions to the greater environment. I am honored to have gotten to know Mark better over the recent years and I consider him a friend, resource, and dude who wears a cape (super hero).

More work is coming, I am sure of that – stay tuned. Until then, here’s where you can find Mark and his work:

* Lingua franca in the context of stretching the idea in this article  has been sheet music, the record, and word of mouth. Now we use computers as instruments, studios, communication portals and the internet is a big part of this shift in the sharing of ideas – all facilitated by computer technology.

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An Evening with Erin Barra

by Marc on Jun.20, 2011, under Knowledge, Locally, Meet-Ups and Gatherings, News

Details : Next Meet Up 26June2011 w/Erin Barra. Lucid Gallery. ALL AGES AND FREE!!! APC40 template training IS ON THE SCHEDULE. ALL DETAILS ARE HERE INCLUDING THE RSVP!!!

Erin Barra - The Meet Up!

Erin Barra (http://www.erinbarra.com/) is playing Cervante’s on June 25th ($8+ All Ages) – Cervante’s Listing.

More exciting is that she is taking some time out of her schedule to join US to talk about her use of Ableton, integration in live performance, and the band’s take on the changing music scene.

Details :

  • FREE!
  • All Ages
  • FREE STUFF / Give Away!
  • Live Performance!
  • Sample and file trading HIGHLY encouraged! This should always be happening!
  • PLUS some typical user group action…see below!

Catch up with Erin via any of these resources:

http://www.erinbarra.com/

www.facebook.com/erinbarramusic

www.twitter.com/erinbarra

Bio Teaser : If Alicia Keys and Nelly Furtado collided with Daft Punk and Esthero in the vast circuitry of an Akai APC 40, you’d probably end up with an experience as rich and soulful as Erin Barra. Joining the likes of MNDR and Tokimonsta, Erin is part of a brave new digital audio live performance armada of female artists riding a tech savvy wave of musical and electronic innovation.

Don’t forget that her new album “Illusions” is available NOW!

Erin will be giving away download discounts for any Ableton products, lots of free Swag (shirts/bags/mouse pads+) – so those of you looking to complete your fashion statement by safety pinning an Ableton mouse pad to the back of your acid washed jean jacket are in luck!!

### The other stuff:

I (Marc) am on a RAMPAGE training and sharing my APC40 template.  This is a free template for live performance of cell based Ableton Sets (also compatible with DJ styles). Don’t hesitate to bring your laptop to the meet up!!!

Download the current version of the template here:

http://djnsm.com/excluded/djnsm-template/

PASSWORD : “microwave” – quick intro manual included with download (1.5 mb DLoad, 1.49 mb for the PDF document)

The template is built in part form the patches we’re collecting on our repository located here : https://github.com/datamafia/ableton-colorado-user-data > click the “Downloads” link for a *.zip or tarball.

This is a great opportunity to skip the 200 hours required to build a solid template and get out performing!

Also on the evening is networking and some sharing of skills (I have a few fun tricks I learned recently for effects processing!).

If anyone has something to share, questions to ask, or live advice – Please bring it!

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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

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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

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Digging in the Crate – some photos fomr past meet ups (not too far past)

by Marc on Jun.05, 2011, under Documentation

This is one of many views, we love our room so much! (yhe Walnut)

Chase Presenting (compression discussion)

Circle Six - Mike has deep ideas on compression.

Another Great photo (James here)

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APC40 Template pre-party (Friday June 3 2011)

by Marc on Jun.01, 2011, under Knowledge, Locally, Meet-Ups and Gatherings, Releases

This is a super casual hand on pre-release of my template. I will be at Lucid Gallery (719 West 8th Denver Google Maps) at 4:30 to hang and introduce people to this method. (I playing music in the evening)

This is specifically a gathering to get this template in people’s hands and into a discipline for live performance.  This template uses the platter (aka 9 box) method.  You will need to use this method for the template.

Platter defined : 4 column wide *.als set containing mastered, correctly leveled wave files with no effects, no send/return, and no MIDI. WAVE FILES only! Each platter should be “Collect All And Saved” (see below)

A platter looks like this:

Notice : Only wave files, no FX, nothing – just the wave file with warping. Left to right, each column:

  • X : eXtra channel – good for what ever you need!
  • M : Melody channel : mids, melody, etc.
  • B : Bass or percussion and support (depends on your genre – no bass proper in Techno usually)
  • D : Drum track – this is the main beat.

Everything in the template uses this 4-wide XMBD method.

You will need to COLLECT ALL AND SAVE EVERYTHING TO THE PROJECT FOLDER!

File > Collect All and Save > yes to everything!

Bring your laptop, platter file(s), and your APC!

Allowed actions in platters (technically speaking):

  • Follow actions
  • Warping and warp algorithm settings
  • Envelope modulation on the sample
  • Launch settings
  • Loop/start/stop settings

Keep it simple – trust me!

The template is built in Ableton 8.2.2 and I have tested it back to 8.1.3 – I suspect it is barley compatible with lite/free versions of Ableton (untested).

The template is SOLID and uses ghost tracks for bussing, drag-and-drop *.als file methods, the APC control surface, dummy clips, and chain selection.

But don’t worry – you only need to have you platters ready! No need to go under the hood until you are ready! Please contact me via Facebook OR email if you want to come – this is SUPER CASUAL!

I repeat, SUPER CASUAL!

marc [at] CreativeElectronica [dot] com is the email!

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Groovin’ Weekend Ahead (May 20-23 2011)

by Marc on May.20, 2011, under Locally, News

Well, I am sitting here and the rain has seemed to pass. The neighbors ark was almost complete, little did they know I was using a sling shot to launch termites at them!

So, here’s some goings on for the weekend to get you outside and in the music:

May 20, 2011 – Tonight (Friday) at The Beauty Bar Denver via Peter Black (Analog Space)

Anyone who’s been around and is a Jazz fan (KUVO) should remember So What! Tonight there is a reunion (more to come?) and fits very much into the local down-tempo/acid jazz upsurge.   So What traidtionally was a late Friday night show featuring DJ K-Nee highlighting Acid Jazz and future music (just like our user group). The beat goes on – tonight with DJs K-Nee, Big Styles, Peter Black and of course the door diva Ms. Deirdre!

The Beauty Bar stands behind the Manicure & Martini policy, so guys, get ready for sexy nails.

I (Marc) will be at this show, come down and say hi

May 20-21 at Cervantes via J.Wail from Bridging the Music.

Billed as “soulful funk” Cervantes continues to support the hip and cool music by hosting these events Friday and Saturday featuring  The Royal Family Ball with Soulive, Lettuce & Special Guests Nigel Hall and Break Science! There are limited $35 2 day passes available as well. Click over to Cervantes for details.

May 21 at Sutra Audio Damage (Facebook link)

Happening the 3rd Saturday of each month Brandon brings together a crew of DJ, Controllerists, and musicians for an evening of fun and dance. With the weather looking more postive plan on hanging out on the patio.

This edition marks the entrance of Red+Hot+Cool to open the evening with some down-tempo/acid jazz followed by a little hip-hop, then full on damage with Seven7th WaveDirty Little Thieves, Vegas and  DJ Diabolic.

I (marc/DJNSM)will be playing w/Spacebass (on the 5 string) from 6-8 w/acid jazz vibes and our guest Kent from Seven7th Wave on guitar. FREE before 9p, drink special and more!

Audio Damage compilation available here

Also tonight (May 20, 2011) via Ableton User Group awesome member David R – Robag Wruhme will be at Cluster Studio (3881 N Steele St. Denver) for a first ever Colorado appearance.

Other artists for the evening include John Templeton (Emote) and Scott Everett(Mother Earth Sound System).

Boulder – Tonight (May 20, 2011) BOOMTUT at Apex Movement (5757 Arapahoe Avenue, Boulder). Thi comes via Ben with the Whomp Truck. It should be a HEAVY night – look at the line up:

  • 10-11: DMTree (Pathways)
  • 11-12: Milkman (Rumpus Royale)
  • 12-1: Noah Deep (WTC)
  • 1-2: Pillow Fight (Jungle Bums)
  • 2-3:30: Just Ben and Citrus (WTC)
  • 3:30-5: Coult 45 and Ishe (WTC)
  • Facebook Event

Sunday Afternoon May 22 2011 – Bar Standard we are hosting a monthly Red+Hot+Cool downtempo patio session. Yes! Get out in the sun and DO IT! (Facebook Event). This crew includes:

This event starts at 4p and is scheduled to be FREE.

If your weekend extends to Monday – Spacebass and I will be throwing down a late night set at Cervantes (Otherside) in conjunction with Bridging the Music (thanks guys). Sometime around 11:30 we will begin with a heavy hitting controller/analog synth/big beats set to sooth the savage beasts. We are excited to cross over with new friends!

See you out there!

–Marc

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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 coverageVia Livid’s site. How about a picture?

More holes to stick it in here!

Via Chase -- LEARN MAX!

And finally -- FREE PATCHES in our NEW REPO! -- details.

 

I really am not clear on that GitHub logo yet...

 

 

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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

I really am not clear on that GitHub logo yet... CLICK TO DOWNLOAD!

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:

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!

 

 

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Ableton Colorado User Group by Ableton Colorado User Group is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License.
Based on a work at abltn.com.
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Ableton, Ableton Live, Operator and Sampler are trademarks of Ableton AG. Ableton Colorado is a User Group run by local musicians and is in no way endorsed, affiliated, etc by Ableton or any other group. Our meet-ups, operation, events, and merchandise are produced by the users and funded by the users. We only endorse quality music and people. We are only interested in sharing and learning. There is no profit motive behind this group or site. Founded in 2009 we are still kicking it hard as explorers of the frontier of electronic music. We appreciate all the help and support form members and local business - but we are proud to maintain this effort through our own money and investments in the music scene. If you have questions or want to help please contact us.

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