Download my Dynamic EQs from here: buymeacoffee.com/matttinklermusic/e/302027 Also, I've kicked off a monthly newsletter. If you'd like to join up, head here: matttinklermusic.com/signup
Thank you for this tutorial. I have enjoyed the Waves F6 for years without really understanding it. I have also been mystified and confused by racks in Ableton Live. Especially when it comes to racks within racks. You explain this in a clear easy to follow way and one which I feel confident I can follow along with on my laptop while watching on TV with finger on pause button. I intend doing just that and if it goes as well as I hope it will, I will definitely be looking into more tutorials from you. I'm assuming that once I understand it I will be able to either make a multi-band version or at least save the EQ to apply copies at different frequencies. I stopped watching during the last little bit about shelf EQ etc as it was getting a bit beyond me. I'm sure once I follow through and create my own I will understand it though.
You're very welcome! Yeah this video has a lot to unpack if you've never done something like this before, but if you do follow along it'll definitely help you understand a lot more about racks and also max for live modulation in Live. If you have any questions as you go through, please feel free to leave a comment! :)
Nice! I assume this particular tutorial is only possible in Ableton 12 due to the envelope follower settings being able to go to remote? Idk if Ableton 11 has that option. Not at my computer to check atm.
It's definitely possible in Live 11! Remote is just the only option in Live 11 so there's no option of changing it, but everything else is identical! :)
Download my Dynamic EQs from here: buymeacoffee.com/matttinklermusic/e/302027
Also, I've kicked off a monthly newsletter. If you'd like to join up, head here: matttinklermusic.com/signup
THANK YOU ❤ , I will do this also for recreating Fab filter proC for the sidechain Eq
You're welcome! You can definitely use similar techniques for a sidechain EQ. Thanks for watching. :)
Masterclass
Thanks for watching!
Yes, You did it as promised. Amazing and complicated. I am going to learn this slowly. Ha ha ha. Thanks ❤
Haha, you're welcome! :D
Thank you for watching, definitely worth taking your time with this one. :)
You are a star! 🙌🙌🙌🙌🙌😂
Thank you! :D
Great video
Thank you! Glad you enjoyed it. :)
Thank you for this tutorial. I have enjoyed the Waves F6 for years without really understanding it. I have also been mystified and confused by racks in Ableton Live. Especially when it comes to racks within racks. You explain this in a clear easy to follow way and one which I feel confident I can follow along with on my laptop while watching on TV with finger on pause button. I intend doing just that and if it goes as well as I hope it will, I will definitely be looking into more tutorials from you. I'm assuming that once I understand it I will be able to either make a multi-band version or at least save the EQ to apply copies at different frequencies. I stopped watching during the last little bit about shelf EQ etc as it was getting a bit beyond me. I'm sure once I follow through and create my own I will understand it though.
You're very welcome! Yeah this video has a lot to unpack if you've never done something like this before, but if you do follow along it'll definitely help you understand a lot more about racks and also max for live modulation in Live. If you have any questions as you go through, please feel free to leave a comment! :)
Nice! I assume this particular tutorial is only possible in Ableton 12 due to the envelope follower settings being able to go to remote? Idk if Ableton 11 has that option. Not at my computer to check atm.
It's definitely possible in Live 11! Remote is just the only option in Live 11 so there's no option of changing it, but everything else is identical! :)
Anyone learning 'mixing' atm is barking up the wrong tree. Stick to the stuff ai can't do
That's what people said about mastering when things like LANDR came out, but there are still plenty of mastering engineers in the world. :)