Puremagnetik's collection of free Ableton Live Packs represents a hand-picked assortment of analog synths, beat machines, vintage keyboards and hacked gizmos. Shop for Ableton Live Drum loops. Pro Drum Loops is the source for drum loops, sound packs & drum samples from popular songs. This free Ableton Live Pack includes a selection of vintage keyboards from the key players in the past 50 years of electronic piano technology. Foundation Keyboards includes lite versions of Puremagnetik’s Mark One, Wurlitzer and Clavinet Ableton Live Packs. The full multi sampled Live Packs include even more detail and expressiveness.
A new dynamic
Bands who use Live in their setup often use a click track to make sure they’re in time. The drummer follows the computer and their groove locks to the grid. BeatSeeker is designed to reverse these roles. Now Live doesn’t have to set the tempo; it can follow it.
How it works
Ableton Live 10.1 Keyboard Shortcuts: Free Ableton Live Pack #179. Ableton Live 10 and 10.1 introduce some really useful keyboard shortcuts that can drastically improve your workflow. I’ve put together a PDF file that you can print for easy access. 137 Shortcuts for Ableton Live 9 (MacOS) 1. Showing and Hiding Results. Adjusting Values. I am going to use an organ sample from the Ableton Live 7 Legacy pack (you can download the pack from Its location is Instruments Instrument Rack Live Legacy 7 Keys B5. I have programmed in a simple organ chord pattern that plays on the upbeat, which will give the beat a bit of a swing feel.
Place the device on a track and send it your audio - whether it’s live drums or any other rhythmic signal. It detects the signal’s BPM and matches Live to its tempo, so you can launch Live to play in sync and adapt to the push and pull of the drummer.
Drummers can choose between the accuracy of playing to a click in Fixed Tempo Mode, or the human feel of Tempo Following Mode - where Live responds to tempo shifts and subtle fluctuations. You can switch Live between these modes using one simple control, which can MIDI-map to a footswitch or other controller for use in live performance.
BeatSeeker is designed for use with live drums, but can be used to sync Live with turntables, drum machines, or any other rhythmic or percussive signals used in performance or production.
The device has been developed by Andrew Robertson, based on research at the Centre for Digital Music, Queen Mary University of London.
A new dynamic
Bands who use Live in their setup often use a click track to make sure they’re in time. The drummer follows the computer and their groove locks to the grid. BeatSeeker is designed to reverse these roles. Now Live doesn’t have to set the tempo; it can follow it.
How it works
Place the device on a track and send it your audio - whether it’s live drums or any other rhythmic signal. It detects the signal’s BPM and matches Live to its tempo, so you can launch Live to play in sync and adapt to the push and pull of the drummer.
Drummers can choose between the accuracy of playing to a click in Fixed Tempo Mode, or the human feel of Tempo Following Mode - where Live responds to tempo shifts and subtle fluctuations. You can switch Live between these modes using one simple control, which can MIDI-map to a footswitch or other controller for use in live performance.
BeatSeeker is designed for use with live drums, but can be used to sync Live with turntables, drum machines, or any other rhythmic or percussive signals used in performance or production.
The device has been developed by Andrew Robertson, based on research at the Centre for Digital Music, Queen Mary University of London.