When producing a song I can spend a good 20-30 minutes working on creating a single ear tingling transition. Usually I make transitions when the song is almost finished. The reason I wait until the near end of the song’s creation is two fold. First, I like to hear the entire song from beginning to end and as I do so my brain tells me, “This is the spot where something is needed!”. Second, I use the audio of the full song’s mix to create the effect. You can here the kind of transition I am talking about at :06 seconds right before the vocal starts:
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Here’s how it was done using Ableton Live:
- I rendered one bar of the full song exactly where the transition is going to be placed.
- I created a new Audio Track.
- I delete the audio on all the channels where the new transition will be (cut a hole).
- I drag my rendered clip into the arrangement on the newly created audio track and place it horizontally where I created the hole.
- Now I play back the song. It should sound just like you have not done anything yet.
- I experiment by loading different effect plug-ins on the new audio channel where the rendered clip sits. I try and find some heavy mangling plug-ins to really make the transition stand out.
- I re-render the clip with effects on it. I will usually do 4 different variations.
- I delete the plug-ins and the original plain rendered clip leaving a blank channel again.
- I drag in each of my rendered variations one by one replacing them with each other and listening to figure out which one is the most interesting fit.
- I also reverse each variation (in the Clip View) and listen to how that sounds.
Usually by this point I have a wicked sounding transition. In the audio sample I above I also cut and repeated the last 4 sixteenth notes and automated Ableton’s built in high pass filter to sweep down.
This process may seem like overkill but its the minor sweet effects that are the icing on a good song.
This entry was written by , posted on September 24, 2008 at 7:31 am, filed under Ableton Live, music, plug-ins, song writing, sounds, synthesizer and tagged Ableton Live, Effectrix, PSP Audioware, PSP Nitro, render, song writing, The Horrorist, transition. Bookmark the permalink. Follow any comments here with the RSS feed for this post.
















wicked? isn’t that a bit late 80′s early 90′s?
Oh yeah the style of the music sure. I was pointing to the fill itself and how its worth spending time creating them. I admit Im stuck somewhere in the late 80s :)
nice info, thx for sharing
transitions are so important to give that extra richness to a song
these are quality tips…
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