Resampling

Re-Recording

Imagine you’re working with a vocal sample you’ve chopped up and want to bake it into a new piece of audio.

You need to understand how to record in Ableton in general. For resampling you have to create a new audio track and set its input either to

  • Resampling which will record what is played on the master track
  • The audio output of the track you want to resample

Now you can arm the track and record into an audio clip/

Benefits for Further Processing

With the new, re-sampled audio file in hand, you now have a consolidated version of your work. This “baked-in” file can be:

Easily manipulated further: It’s less CPU-intensive to process one file rather than multiple slices with several effects. Layered or integrated: You can now use the new file as a sound source in other parts of your project or mix it with other elements without worrying about losing your original creative tweaks.git In essence, re-sampling in Ableton allows you to commit your creative decisions to a single audio file, streamlining your workflow and opening up new avenues for further processing and experimentation.

cool tutorial how to resampling:

Techniques shown Pros & Cons

Resampling Input Track Output as Source Track Output to Track Input Freezing & Flatten Rendering
Master Effects! Pre-FX, Post-FX, Post-Mixer Post-Mixer FX Print in like Resampling
more tracks at once NO Master Effects more tracks at once Post-FX label file directly
only one track (but you can use groups) only ONE track
Faster