![]() I simply right click on the clip and select “Extract Groove.” Now the “feel” from that clip is available in my groove pool, which will pop up underneath Live’s browser when I extract the groove.īy clicking and dragging that groove onto the MIDI clip that controls my electronic drums, I get an infusion of vibe, and my very straight robotic pocket turns much more interesting. So I’ve clicked and dragged that MIDI loop to a clip in Live’s session view and I’m not going to use the audio instead, I’m going to extract the groove and apply it to my electronic drums. But it has a pocket that’s really interesting and appealing. ![]() ![]() We’re looking for a groove that has the feel, some push and pull, something… interesting.Ĭracking open one of Toontrack’s EZX Expansions (Pop/Rock to be exact) I found a groove that on its own doesn’t sound like it would work in anything techno or house. This works because EZDrummer’s MIDI loops are taken from recorded performances of great session drummers.įor starters let’s put an instance of EZDrummer onto a new instrument track and open up the instrument’s MIDI browser. We’re going to use the MIDI library in Toontrack’s EZDrummer to find an interesting groove that’s a bit more interesting and organic than your standard MPC swing. In our session, we start with a straightforward beat in Ableton Live’s Drum Rack. Maybe the easiest way to add some vibe is to change the actual groove of your drum sequence.
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