Thanks for this video. Syntakt is great for live performance. But when you put separately your tracks to ableton there're bleeding ears. All FX in syntakt live in one FX block, and this is also a separate track. So , we have a couple of ways to eat that shit: 1.create songs in syntakt and record its main output. 2. Record each track separately from main output or fx block and then process it in Ableton. 3. Record multiple tracks and then arrange,mix,master them in Ableton. I was really annoyed of such shit that i cannot write separate tracks with fx for each own simultaneously, but I still love syntakt. It's really demonic machine for live performance.
Hey thanks for sharing 🙌 I personally had quite some success with the method 2. you listed, seeing the Syntakt as a mono synth for instance - making sound design on the machine, maybe make a sequence then record it and process it in my Ableton project according to what I need in that production. If I am using Ableton I prefer to use all the plugins from the DAW as it allows so much more flexibility, the verb and delay are very nice but sometimes (for melodic techno / progressive house) I need huge reverbs or room reverbs and can't really make it the syntakt verb, but I agree for live performance is a beast :) here my last daw-less setup I used for my last gig. instagram.com/p/DB7T3dVsjMC/
Thanks for the nice comment :) If you mean the reverb and delay you can also have those as a separate track in Ableton (I quickly assign that output to an Ableton channel when I’m finishing setting up the inputs in the video). If you mean the FX track I am not sure how that is handled - didn’t try/investigate yet. But I guess it will just affect the outputs of the tracks that are routed into it?
Nailing it.
Thanks for this video.
Syntakt is great for live performance. But when you put separately your tracks to ableton there're bleeding ears.
All FX in syntakt live in one FX block, and this is also a separate track.
So , we have a couple of ways to eat that shit:
1.create songs in syntakt and record its main output.
2. Record each track separately from main output or fx block and then process it in Ableton.
3. Record multiple tracks and then arrange,mix,master them in Ableton.
I was really annoyed of such shit that i cannot write separate tracks with fx for each own simultaneously, but I still love syntakt. It's really demonic machine for live performance.
Hey thanks for sharing 🙌 I personally had quite some success with the method 2. you listed, seeing the Syntakt as a mono synth for instance - making sound design on the machine, maybe make a sequence then record it and process it in my Ableton project according to what I need in that production.
If I am using Ableton I prefer to use all the plugins from the DAW as it allows so much more flexibility, the verb and delay are very nice but sometimes (for melodic techno / progressive house) I need huge reverbs or room reverbs and can't really make it the syntakt verb, but I agree for live performance is a beast :)
here my last daw-less setup I used for my last gig.
instagram.com/p/DB7T3dVsjMC/
awesome tutorial
You are awesome :)
Great tutorial TNX for this 👍🙂
If I may ask what the reference track is, it seems interesting 🧐
Thanks :) the ref track is from Unkown Concept, I think 'The Purge' check him out amazing stuff!
@@solarj I appreciate it. Thank you 🙏🙏
Nice. Thanks for sharing.
Does that mean that we completely bypass Syntakt FX Block and make all the FX in Ableton?
Thanks for the nice comment :)
If you mean the reverb and delay you can also have those as a separate track in Ableton (I quickly assign that output to an Ableton channel when I’m finishing setting up the inputs in the video). If you mean the FX track I am not sure how that is handled - didn’t try/investigate yet. But I guess it will just affect the outputs of the tracks that are routed into it?
hard to watch, audio from mic is very low, audio from syntakt makes my ears bleed (ok sorts itself out once you get into it, sorry)
You’re right 🥲 I tried a different setup and it was not optimal, thanks for the feedback lesson learned!