An LFO is a great way to add rhythm to a preset, and especially useful if you want a groove but you’re not working with drums and beats. Live is absolutely dripping with LFOs: they’re everywhere, in instruments and audio effects. Time spent with these is never wasted – they can produce a wide range of results. It’s possible to choose from several different filter types, as well as circuits modelled on individual real-world filters. The filter is the same one found throughout Live’s audio effects, and is ever-present along the bottom of the Simpler display, and in more detail under the Controls tab. ![]() Finding your filterĪs well as separate audio and MIDI effects there are powerful sculpting tools inside Simpler itself. If you like, you can create a new rack that contains the original rack plus any MIDI/audio effects before/after it, so the entire structure can be saved as a single preset and recalled from other projects. ![]() We added a reverb after the rack, so it applies to the whole thing, and put a delay on the upper chain containing the high frequencies only. Reverbs and delays are great for adding spacey effects to a rack. If working on a sound for a particular project, you should EQ it in relation to the other parts, as an abstract concept, it’s hard to tell how much bass you might want. In the example here we’ve used two chains, but there’s no limit to how many chains you can have, especially remembering that racks can contain other racks! We applied EQ to each chain to avoid building up too many clashing frequencies too much low end and mid can make everything sound very mushy. Once you have a rack under way, the fun begins.
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