Entered CNET Catalog: 09/13/2005
SKU: CNETABLETONLIVE5
Manufacturer: Ableton
Manufacturer description
Ableton Live is the only solution designed for each stage of the musical process, from creation to production to performance. In the creative stage, Live is transparent, intuitive and responsive, capturing inspiration and encouraging the flow of musical ideas. During production, Live provides all of the professional tools and studio compatibility required to complete and perfect projects. On stage, Live delivers the expressive control and stability that innumerable performing artists have come to rely on. Live 5 - from inspiration to studio to stage. Create. Produce. Perform.CNET editors' review
- Editors' Choice: No
- Reviewed on: 09/16/2005
You could say that Ableton Live is lucky to hold the middle ground between entry-level music makers such as Apple's GarageBand and high-end professional products such as the venerable Logic Pro, but Live got there by making its own luck. This excellent music-editing, remixing, and tweaking app has earned its top spot by forging its own path and catering to a high-end hip and creative following of producers and DJs. All but owning the music-editing prosumer space, it expands its lead with version 5.2, which offers a dripping handful of new goodies to all its followers--whether they're pros looking for a light app to have fun with, amateur DJs looking for new ways to warp the beat, or interested newcomers trying to join the loop- and sample-infused club. Listen for yourself to this sample track created by Live.
Live veterans won't find much different about version Ableton Live 5.2's interface, but people used to other music-editing programs might blink at the unusual layout. Live has deliberately never looked like traditional programs, choosing a more intuitive--and more colorful--interface. We love, for example, that mousing over a button gets you not only a pop-up window with that button's name but also a full description of what it does in the optional Info View in the lower left-hand corner. You might want to run through one or two of the included lessons to get your bearings, but before long, you'll have the hang of it.Live's well-designed interface provides an enormous amount of functionality in a tight space. A browser at the top left lets you choose your samples, filters, effects, and more, and it displays your sonic creations in a viewing pane to the right. You can toggle to see either the Session view (which is more like an instrument) or the Arrangement view (which is completely editable), depending on whether you want to focus on particular loops or instruments or see how it all flows together. Along the bottom of the screen, you'll see the effects and filters that you've added to your loops. We like that Live reserves the lower-left corner for the optional Info view, which explains whatever part of the interface your mouse is hovering over. Live's creators, in fact, constantly go the extra mile to explain what could be a confusing app and get newcomers in on the fun; Live comes with a seven-lesson built-in tutorial, and the Ableton Web site has four excellent QuickTime movies.
Hard-core users can employ a variety of MIDI hardware to more easily control the Live interface. Check out some examples.
The new features in Ableton Live 5.2--and there are a lot more than we can list here--were suggested by hard-core Live users, and they feel not just fun but tremendously useful. A new Freeze Track feature creates uneditable sample files out of selected tracks. This cuts down on demanding CPU operations by allowing your computer to focus on other tracks; it will be a huge boon to those working on complex multitrack arrangements. The new plug-in-delay compensation automatically adjusts for plug-ins and effects so that your tracks will always be in sync no matter what you throw at them. Launchable arrangement markers let you place bookmarks within a song and map them to keys for instant access during performance. The new features feel so essential, you'll wonder how you got along without them. Live even becomes a lot more useful to pros with the inclusion of support for Mackie-compatible mixers. Plug in a mixer such as Tascam's FW-1082/1884 or the Yamaha 01X, and it and Live will work together like one smoothly running machine. You can even launch preset locators with the mixer just as you can within the program.
Of course, Live includes new effects to please its dance, trance, and hip-hop following (maybe we're wrong, but it's hard to imagine Nashville wannabes sitting down with Live). The new Beat Repeat effect lets you create interesting repetitions of a track; it includes full controls so that you can adjust it any way you want or leave it random. Phaser and Flanger provide classic guitar effects, while the impressive Saturator adds extra warmth. The new Arpeggiator creates arpeggios (phrases with raising or decreasing volume), which you can then adjust or repeat.

Remixers will love that Live can now import any MP3, Ogg Vorbis, Ogg Vorbis FLAC, or FLAC file on your hard drive, giving you a simple way to play with much of the music in your collection. Note that Live doesn't work with DRM-protected files, so if you've bought music online, you'll need to burn it to a standard audio disc and reimport it.

Other highlights include Complex Warp mode, which lets you change tempo and pitch separately, and Live Clip Storage, which lets you quickly stash a clip for use in other projects. Because the people behind Live know that every polished DJ or producer was once a kid trying to learn the ropes, Live 5.2 comes with improved built-in lessons. Live still doesn't have a history view that would let you undo changes out of order, which we think would be helpful.
Ableton Live 5.2 performed beautifully in our testing. It loaded clips and effects quickly and never crashed. While first-timers and even those upgrading should look through the lessons to get up to speed on the interface or the new features (Live's controls are not always obvious; for example, you can always adjust numbers in a text box by dragging your mouse up and down, even though there's no scroll bar), you'll quickly be creating your own professional or just plain bizarre tracks. A large library of clips and effects allows you to jump right in, even if you don't have an instrument to plug in.In real-world performance, Live is just as impressive--and fun. We loved that we could hear the results of any adjustments we made right away, without waiting for the song to reload. Simply click a sound file to preview it, then drag and drop it onto the colorful Excel-spreadsheet-like interface. The app lets you apply effects and trigger individual tracks or entire sequences with the click of a mouse, a keyboard, or a MIDI controller. You can also--in real time--examine a loop and edit beginnings and end points to your liking. Once you've finished a session, you can go back to the Arrangement view, then tweak and edit the performance. The intuitive and responsive controls are ripe for experimentation, so you don't need to be a musician to come up with interesting songs, sequences, or patterns.
| Software requirements and specs |
| Platform(s): Windows 2000/XP; Mac OS 10.2.8 or higher |
| Processor: 600MHz or faster (Windows); G3 or better (Mac) |
| RAM: 512MB (Windows and Mac) |
| Sound requirements: Windows-compatible sound card (Windows) |
| Downloadable full version: Yes |
User opinions
Select a User Opinion to view: 1 2
User Rating:
9/10
It's cool !
Pros: fast intuitive way to build loop created music
Cons: lacks some audio and midi features of other DAWS
If you are making electronica or dance orientated music, is it a diamond of a program but if you are recording rock music or stuff with a heavy emphasis on live audio performances rather than clips, or doing a lot of detailed MIDI work with sysex or CC commands then you should consider a deeper program. I have Cubase SX3 and Live rewires nicely into it, Live is a great tool for quickly arranging samples and clips into an arrangement but it has less in the way of mixing and mastering, audio editing and functions and MIDI than Cubase. As I produce music of various genres, I do feel that Live is not the best 'all round' program - but then again, it wasn't really designed to be a standard DAW recording 16 tracks of drums and guitars in 5 minute takes and comping everything together, it has many strengths and features not available in any other program and really is a great choice for knocking out quick electronica/hip hop/trance/dance tunes. Just make sure you get some good softsynths to go with it because simpler and impulse will be very limiting after a while. I'm hearing a lot of people running Absynth and Zero-G stuff as vstis within Live on a regular basis.
(ABleton's operator FM/hybrid synth is also a good choice)
However, Live works well and sounds great and version 5 and 6 can do a lot of what Cubase and Logic can do and do it in a friendlier way...
User Rating:
9/10
Use Cubase? Sonar? Logic? WHY????
Pros: Ease of use, powerful features, straightforward features... (just too many to list).
Cons: None so far.
Live 5.0 is the TOTAL opposite. For starters, it's a lean program that loads quickly unlike bloated Sonar and Cubase which takes far too long to load, even on a wickedly fast system. Live pretty much has the same capabilities and features as the other three except it's SO MUCH easier and quicker to get things done. The user interface is streamlined and straightforward. All of the necessary info and tools that are used most of the time are very accessible. The layout is so intelligently designed that I was able to record tracks, mix down, etc. comfortably within an hour and I scarcely referred to the PDF manual.
If you're into creating music efficiently and want professional results without the pain of dealing with needlessly complicated, buggy software, Live 5.0 is the answer. This is a TRUE professional DAW program! The rest are amateurish by comparison.

