efficient use of MachFive 3 in Ableton Live?
Posted: Sat Oct 31, 2015 8:49 am
I'm using a lot of MF3 inside of Ableton Live and it works great. It really expands the quality and quantity of my sounds.
When I use MF3 in DP I never use more than about five parts before I create another instance. I do this because I find it easier to manage grouping of the sounds, and also because I've read on this forum that MF3 more evenly distributes the processing load when multiple instances are employed (multithreading was mentioned).
My question is, should I do the same thing in Ableton? Lately I've been creating a separate instance of MF3 each time I make a new part. There's a lot less signal routing when I do this; I can use one track to handle volume, plugins, etc., without having to route anything to an additional aux track. Is this an efficient use of MF3? Or should I manage it like I do in DP, with multiple parts in a single instance and aux tracks to handle any part that needs to be broken out of MF? What is better from a processing and memory usage standpoint?
I guess it comes down to this: does each instantiation of MF take more memory and processing power than more parts within fewer instantiations?
thanks!
Mike E
When I use MF3 in DP I never use more than about five parts before I create another instance. I do this because I find it easier to manage grouping of the sounds, and also because I've read on this forum that MF3 more evenly distributes the processing load when multiple instances are employed (multithreading was mentioned).
My question is, should I do the same thing in Ableton? Lately I've been creating a separate instance of MF3 each time I make a new part. There's a lot less signal routing when I do this; I can use one track to handle volume, plugins, etc., without having to route anything to an additional aux track. Is this an efficient use of MF3? Or should I manage it like I do in DP, with multiple parts in a single instance and aux tracks to handle any part that needs to be broken out of MF? What is better from a processing and memory usage standpoint?
I guess it comes down to this: does each instantiation of MF take more memory and processing power than more parts within fewer instantiations?
thanks!
Mike E