danika wrote:
Think of a Scene in Live Session View as a Chunk. The difference is that all Scenes automatically share the same Mixer. I don't have to mess with this V-Rack nonsense. I tried building up songs from chunks in DP for awhile and finally said forget it. This V-Rack limitation is one of the main reasons DP cannot compete with Live for real time performance or impromptu arranging.
I'm a huge fan of Live... I've been using it since 2004. I think that your comparison of Chunks in DP with Scenes in Live is pretty misplaced.
Live has two ways to arrange your projects (called Sets). The Session view and the Arrangement view.
In terms Live's intended workflow, the Arrangement view is there as a sketch pad area to edit audio and MIDI, and to build your arrangement into regions that can then be dragged into the Session view as triggerable/loopable clips.
When you drag something out of one view you may erase it from there, and if you ever need to you may drag it back. This is all happening in the same Live Set.
Live then allows you to record your Session view loops/clips back into the Arrangement, essentially creating an on-the-fly arrangement of your material.
This is an amazing workflow for triggering loops and samples or for composing in a non-linear fashion.
None of this has much to do with the traditional paradigm of the recording studio workflow as we know it. Live is a pretty interesting and effective way of creating loop-based arrangements (basically) that can then be remixed on the fly and played back into the same Set.
DP is based on a more traditional recording studio paradigm, where you have extensive toolsets dedicated to capturing audio and MIDI, editing this material, and mixing this material.
DP is also very forward thinking in that it has always endeavored to give users a way to combine these DP projects into one another. At any time you may load one DP project into another as a Chunk and then treat all of these compiled Chunks as a single project.
The reason that V-racks came to be, is to give these Chunks a way of interactively sharing their mixer settings without having to copy mixer settings between them. This is a beautiful idea as it allows you to make incremental changes to the V-Rack settings and see them applied to all loaded Chunks when they are called upon. Just as if you were playing different songs back though a mixing board from a tape machine. This is an elegant and uncomplicated idea.
If you are working on a group of songs that will all share instrumentation and mixes then V-racks become invaluable way to work.
Live Sessions are not like Chunks in that Live Sessions are only a loosely grouped series of clips that can be played back together... or not. They are not specifically attached to any mixer channels (unless you place them there) and they only contain the info that you record into each clip (no global settings like a conductor track or specific automations). Using Live's Session view clips is like being DJ mixing and combining records. You might take the bass line from one album and see how it feels under the vocal break of another.
Chunks in DP are a pretty firmly grouped arrangement of tracks that contain ALL of the tools available in a DP project (MIDI cc/patch changes, track layouts, individual mixer views, etc).Triggering Chunks is more like listening to a playlist of songs in iTunes.
danika wrote:
OTOH I understand how V-Racks are useful if your sequences are different arrangements of a complete song. No other DAW that I'm aware of has that type of functionality.
I can see you are still trying to view DP through Ableton Live lenses and this impossible. V-racks are not only for different arrangements of the
same song (a Live paradigm) they are applicable to entirely different songs that
share instrumentation.
IMO... DP and Live are complimentary tools. They are not in competition with one another. If I was DJ'ing a club, triggering samples in a band, or trying to create an original loop oriented track while preserving an element of randomness, I would use Live.
If I was triggering backing tracks and lighting cues for a major live touring act, composing a score that requires intelligent tempo changes, or need to record a band or an orchestra, for an album project, I would use DP.