Awesome man! And the vocal effects peppering the video are truly the stuff of science fiction... haha. I enjoy these types of videos because I am planning to splurge on a move as soon as possible and it answers many questions about routing etc.
Not seeing anything here you can't do with an Akai MPD or any other set of MIDI pad + CC controllers that have been around for decades. Correct me if I'm wrong, but the only major difference I see is the feedback from the lit pads.
Yes and no. The big difference is that Move is standalone, so all the sampling is happening directly on the device, without needing a computer. Everything I show in this video can be done with just a midi controller , Audio Interface, and Ableton (though things like directly sampling into the Drum Sampler are not possible in Ableton) , but it would take 10-100x the amount of time since you'd have to add tracks, add simplers/samplers, route audio, drag audio to and from those samplers, and midi map controls. The point is to work as quickly as possible so you don't lose the creative flow.
@@CoreyBakerCoreyBaker I don't see the advantage. If you just have a template file already set up to your Ableton, then you would already have track, samplers and your controller mapped. You would just have to do it once and then you are good to go, not every time you are going to improvise.
The advantage is the immediacy of being able to resample anything on Move as well as sample anything from Ableton (and any computer audio like TH-cam or Spotify) into Move, as well as sequencing a pattern/groove right then and there and then recording it into Ableton. And again, when resampling/sampling in Ableton, you have to capture the sample and then drag it into a sampler, and then add/control effects and whatnot. As opposed to on Move where you can instantly sample/resample into a Drum Rack slot, and sequence right away. It's fine if you don't see the value, but in my experience, this is one of the simplest and quickest sampling/resampling workflows i've found for getting ideas going quickly. Just sharing my perspective. Thanks!
Awesome man! And the vocal effects peppering the video are truly the stuff of science fiction... haha. I enjoy these types of videos because I am planning to splurge on a move as soon as possible and it answers many questions about routing etc.
Thanks man! Move is a good move!
looks like fun!
it's a blast man! now i just need to figure out a way to make the desk look cleaner lol
Very cool workflow! What interface is that?
Arturia Audiofuse. It's an incredible interface. I got rid of my Apollos in favor of the Audiofuse!
Not seeing anything here you can't do with an Akai MPD or any other set of MIDI pad + CC controllers that have been around for decades. Correct me if I'm wrong, but the only major difference I see is the feedback from the lit pads.
Yes and no. The big difference is that Move is standalone, so all the sampling is happening directly on the device, without needing a computer. Everything I show in this video can be done with just a midi controller , Audio Interface, and Ableton (though things like directly sampling into the Drum Sampler are not possible in Ableton) , but it would take 10-100x the amount of time since you'd have to add tracks, add simplers/samplers, route audio, drag audio to and from those samplers, and midi map controls. The point is to work as quickly as possible so you don't lose the creative flow.
@@CoreyBakerCoreyBaker I don't see the advantage. If you just have a template file already set up to your Ableton, then you would already have track, samplers and your controller mapped. You would just have to do it once and then you are good to go, not every time you are going to improvise.
The advantage is the immediacy of being able to resample anything on Move as well as sample anything from Ableton (and any computer audio like TH-cam or Spotify) into Move, as well as sequencing a pattern/groove right then and there and then recording it into Ableton. And again, when resampling/sampling in Ableton, you have to capture the sample and then drag it into a sampler, and then add/control effects and whatnot. As opposed to on Move where you can instantly sample/resample into a Drum Rack slot, and sequence right away. It's fine if you don't see the value, but in my experience, this is one of the simplest and quickest sampling/resampling workflows i've found for getting ideas going quickly. Just sharing my perspective. Thanks!