With the Raw button enabled, files will preview at their original tempo and will not loop. With Raw disabled, Live will try to preview files in sync with the current Set, so that you can better judge which samples will work for you. Please note that scrubbing is not possible when Raw is enabled.

Note that you can suppress the creation of .asd files by turning off the Create Analysis Files option in the File/Folder Preferences. All data (except for the default clip settings) can be recreated by Live if the .asd file is missing, however this will take some time for longer samples.


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To view a list of the files referenced by the current Live Set, choose the Manage Files command from the File menu, click the Manage Set button, and then click the View Files button. Live will display one line for each file used by the Live Set. To list all clips or instruments in the Live Set where the file is actually used, click the triangle to expand the line. Here is what you can do:

To manually fix a broken file reference, locate the missing file in the browser, drag it over to the File Manager and drop it on the respective line in the list of missing files. Note that Live will not care if the file you offer is really the file that was missing.

When you save Live Clips, device presets or tracks by dragging them into the Browser, Live manages the copying of associated files based on the selection made in the Collect Files on Export chooser in the Library Preferences. This chooser provides the following options:

Last but not least, you can find the unused files for all Projects found in a specific folder (and its sub-folders): right-click(Win) / CTRL-click(Mac) on a folder in the browser and choose the Manage Projects command, then see the Unused Files section. Live inspects each Project individually and labels a file unused even if another Projects in the same folder does use that file. To prevent losses, you may want to first collect the files into their respective Projects and then purge the Projects of unused files.

I have many GB of freeze files that are taking up a lot of space on my hard drive and some of these files are from years ago. I don't want to delete them if it messes up my project though. So if i delete the freeze file, will it basically just unfreeze the track when i open the project back up? Can i safely delete the files and not worry about messing up my projects?

Hi! Did you manage to do it directly within Ableton with the correct settings? If it does not work, I will simply record the output from OP1f to ableton through audio usb track by track using mute function

I'd rather use Ableton Lite but for a 100% iOS-based solution, I'd recommend getting familiar with OMZ Pythonista, basically a Python IDE for iOS with support for pythonic 3rd-party libraries like writing MIDI files and reading XML. I don't think it would be too difficult to write an .als to .mid converter if that's really important enough to you.

@rs2000 said:

I'd rather use Ableton Lite but for a 100% iOS-based solution, I'd recommend getting familiar with OMZ Pythonista, basically a Python IDE for iOS with support for pythonic 3rd-party libraries like writing MIDI files and reading XML. I don't think it would be too difficult to write an .als to .mid converter if that's really important enough to you.

The most important tool I used was File-Merge which you will find on almost any system, so you can compare files and i was using it for a while to figure out the different track xml trees and to compare different versions i saved at first. Also figuring out differences of Ableton 9, 10 and 11 ALS format. You will have to search for ID's and Pointee's to see how they work and interact, why some repeat and why some just increase their index value in the file.

Be warned, ALS files are gzipped for good reason as they can become quite large. So consider using some stream mechanism for writing the file otherwise you will very likely have memory issues and slow down your own processing significant. Luckely i found out that gzip is a compressing mechanism that can be written on the fly by compressing data blocks without re-reading the whole dataset.

Jukeblocks.io may be based (it clearly does a lot more than Mark's tool) on the work Mark Mossberg did for his python codebase 'dawtool' -- Mark gave a great presentation about this topic at Audio Developer Conference 2020 covering reverse engineering aspects of .als and .flp files. His code might kickstart your experimentation around this!

Make sure Normalize is set to OFF. We set Create Analysis File to OFF so that the .asd copy files of the audio are not created. Set Dither Options to No Dither. There are times when these features are good, but when exporting tracks, especially for use in PRIME, they should be set this way.

Choose your save location for the tracks. Make sure this is somewhere you will easily be able to access them. Then name your files. We recommend naming them: NAMEOFTRACK_BPM_KEY. This helps with organization, and it helps you know the important information about your tracks. Then click Save.

Your files will export out of Ableton. This can take some time depending on bit depth and the size of the files. Once they have exported, go to where you saved them on your computer. If you exported the tracks individually, there will be an extra default bounce that is a stereo track of everything. These can be discarded. Then highlight the individual stems, right click and compress them. This will put them all in a zip file. Once these are compressed you will have one file with all the tracks to help them be organized. This is also how you can upload them to Loop Community.

I want to export my multi-track compositions in Ableton to MIDI to make them usable in Sibelius and to make them less susceptible to "ageing out" (what with proprietary project formats and all that annoying jazz). I can't seem to find an easy way of turning .als files into a batch of .midis or anything similar. Any ideas?

You could also use MIDI Yoke as well. It'll create virtual MIDI ports in your computer - just route every Ableton Live midi channel to one of these ports, then open a multi-track MIDI recorder and put it to record from MIDI Yoke ports, now you'll just need to press play on ableton live and wait until the end of the music.

This is part 2 of the File Management series. Before you attempt to follow this one, you should go through part 1 (Collecting Files) to avoid accidentally deleting any files you still need in other Live Sets.

I am running ableton live 11 intro, and recently got guitar rig 6 for my pc. I really like the effects on it, but i can't seem to get the vst to work in ableton. I'm slightly confused because i have arturia and anteres vst that are working properly.

You will also find a list for Ableton tutorials and tips to help you in your music production adventure. Project files are arranged by genre for simplicity. When you visit the links, you can preview the music and click the download button to get the files directly.

This is why I advice you to install Max fo Live devices in your User Library directly. Of course back-ups of your files and OS should be happening on a regular basis. Make sure you could re-install everything e.g. if you migrate on a new computer.

I have a couple of .aif files that I dragged out of ableton onto my desktop. I open up logic, create a bunch of audio channels and try assigning those .aif files into the channel strip in logic. Everything works and transfers properly, but when I try transferring drum hits (kicks, snares, loops) from ableton (.aif files) into logic, I get the error, "The file '(the file)' is not recognized by Logic Pro X... Please ensure that the file properties are correct and that it is a supported file type." Again when I transfer for example my sub phatty audio, it works. When I try transferring a Kick, it doesn't. Any ideas?

Ableton drum racks are a crucial concept to understand. In this video we show you how to build multi-channel drum racks that can be used across all your projects utilizing Ableton Live Clip files (ALC).

Making a Ableton Live Pack is a great backup method and way to share projects. Live Packs are like zip files in that they can dramatically reduce the size of a project folder, leaving more space on your storage drive. This makes them easy for backup and simple to upload and download when collaborating with someone remotely. Create Pack is located in the File Management section, the same dialog you work in when replacing lost files.

Go to the File menu, move your cursor over Manage Files, then selecting Manage Project and Create Pack. All of your collected files and hard work will be taken and compressed into a .alp file. You can then take that and send it or store it.

"Collections" are useful because they allow for another level of organization personalized to the way you work. You can add files, presets, Audio Racks, Instrument & Drum Racks, devices, samples, sets, etc. (anything that can be displayed in "Live's" Browser Window).

"Live's Collections" are a series of "XMP" files. "XMP" files are plain text files used to store "metadata". (I would suggest NOT trying to open or edit these files for risk of corruption).

The "XMP" files that create "Live's Collections" are stored in the "Ableton Folder Info" subfolder located inside of the "User Library". The default location for the "User Library" is:

An easier method is directly adding audio files into Ableton by simply just dragging and dropping. If you have your audio file already open in your Finder, simply open up Ableton alongside it, and drag the file into a new audio track. You can select multiple files, as well. If you want multiple sounds on one track, simply drag then drop. be457b7860

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