[quote=““William WiLD””]

[quote=“J0bey”]My process at the moment is to construct a beat on RYTM, and then record the individual sounds via the master out, straight into ableton, then I add some sidechain to the bass, and a bit of EQ etc, basically clean everything up and finish the tune in Ableton. But the RYTM allows me the freedom to create on the fly, to get into a flow, which I’ve never had before. Plus the bottom end is absolutely ridiculous.
It’s fucking awesome :slight_smile:
I think eventually I’ll start creating whole tunes on the RYTM and start performing LIVE, but that’s a long way off.
[/quote]

Don’t do that… if you do that you will miss a huge amount of creativity, a huge amount of life in your drums, things that’ you can’t have in Ableton live unless to spend a huge amount of time in MICRO-Editing.
Keep the “Perform” in your chain and don’t loose it by just designing one shot. For me the best way is to sync ALL and Record when you have finish or have very great ideas of the final arrangement. Or record your part with overdub in your daw (you can see overdub and multiple takes in tutorial)

Use the Pattern and build variations… maybe use SONG mode…
And Record when you have done, polish the final Arrangement and voila.

Just my Advises…
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I guess you misunderstood me a little bit, probably because I explained myself poorly. I don’t record a single hit of a drum sound, I record the whole track, of that particular sound (soloed) , which includes all of the parameter tweaks and variations I’ve added on the RYTM. My point was that I use Ableton to fix the EQ’s of a sound and give the track an overall polish.