Abletons Unreleased Limiter! Ableton Live's New Soon To Come Limiter - Rivals Fabfiter?
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- เผยแพร่เมื่อ 9 ก.พ. 2025
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I have no idea what they did with this limiter but it's one of the best limiters I've ever used. Keep in mind I have a manley mastering limiter and a crane song limiter this thing is just super musical and can be pushed harder than Pro L so far from what I've tested
I agree! been having good luck with it myself. so hyped lol
Anything is better than the old limiter 😂😂😂 I'm glad 12.1 is finally out. It was much needed. That old stock one was ass.
Uffff, a better sound track would have been useful.. annoying frequencies on the sample track.
hey, sounds like you've uploaded this video in mono?
I think thats possible ive been having some software issues. Thanks for letting me know!
I need to understand something bro. Many people say put a limiter on the master channel in the production stage, and then turn it off when u are to export it for mastering. Then what's the point of putting it there in the first place?
Ive never heard taking it off before exporting - doesnt make sense to export a clipping track for mastering lol. When you bounce a track out for mastering it should be at about -3db - so if your mix down is done right you should have headroom and shouldnt be engaging a limiter at all
It may be so you can get a rough idea of how it's going to sound when it's mastered. If the mix is being sent to someone for mastering, then it's definitely a good idea to deactivate the limiter so they have more freedom and headroom. If you're the one mastering then definitely keep it on or, export the mix without it, then open a new session just for mastering and then focus on that.
@@silverage9168 Sounds logical. Thanks for the tip boss.
My default ableton set always has a limiter included at the end. I use it to prevent damage to speakers/headphones if let's say a sample I include is way too loud or any other unexpected loudness thing takes place. When exporting for mastering, it's recommended that you leave some headroom and not touch the 0db mark.
If you are grouping your tracks in a smart way, you'll have up to 10 groups which you can just select and lower the volume in the same amount before exporting.
mastering as a separate process in modern music production is stupid. Not using a limiter lets you move faders up infinitely. With a limiter, you can not do that after some point without the sound being weird.
@lowendcandy if one exports as wav 32bit (most mastering engineers ask to do that) you don't get clipping no matter what