![]() Every setting affecting the audio in each signal path step matters. Next, select the ‘Audio’ tab on the left of the Preferences window. Click on the Live (Mac)/File (Windows) menu in the top left corner of your screen and select Preferences. ![]() If you don't understand routing signal (data streams once you're in digital) in Live, this will be difficult which is why you need to understand how the Live mixer (and your audio interface obviously) actually works. To record in Ableton Live, start by selecting your recording device from the Audio settings in Live’s preferences. Where the dodgy sound you hear in Live's monitor comes from can only be solved with you stop assuming you know what the routing is doing and step by step follow the signal, carefully challenging your assumptions what's going on in each single step by examining everything. Obviously this will not sound the same as when you remove any of these two monitor signals. almost sounds like mono track gets split in two channels and panned hard left and hard right with a little weird phasing.How can you tell there's a difference if the audio interface doesn't have monitor on? You mean when you mute the Arrow? If you had monitor on in both places, what you heard should be the direct monitor of incoming signal mixed with the same signal coming back from Live. there's a significant difference with the sound coming in through the arrows mixer and abletons monitor in (UA mixer on mute). i have a UA arrow with the mixers 'console' on mute when i track in ableton. Nah, i don't hear anything when monitor is off. This can be avoided with "Reduced Latency" active on the recording track. The downside is that if you have one too many high latency devices /plug-ins or a large audio buffer you will get inconvenient latency. The upside with the latter is, if setup correctly, what you hear is what it will sound like when playing back as it will be delay compensated with the rest of the set. Decide if you want interface monitoring and use monitor "off" in Live or alternatively adjust your interface to not play back what goes in and use monitoring in Live instead. For Logic you have the Logic Environment, for Ableton Live you have Max for. is it suppose to sound like that to save cpu or something? any help would be awesome!If you turn off "monitor" do you still hear yourself? If so, your interface is playing back the audio that goes in its "zero latency" monitoring. So I decided to develop a Graphical MIDI Monitor using Max of Cycling74. when i play it back after the recording, it sounds like a perfectly fine mono track. This might sound like a newb question but why does it sound like there are two tracks playing whenever i live Monitor In? I can hear myself in my headphones and it's like phasing weird.
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