


I dont really like Maschine, except maybe for controlling NI plug-ins. But I really dont know what Im talking about. – not great for controlling third party VST’sĬontact: via the contact form on my website or on Facebook or Instagram. I think the key is to view Maschine like a separate hardware device and export just some audio files and use that in Live. – more expensive than Maschine but only comes with Ableton Live Intro, which is very limited and sound content is nowhere near NI’s quality or quantity. – (BIG ONE) Ableton Live is a complete DAW, you can do pretty much evevrything in it and with Push 2 it’s like it has an integrated MPC which makes it easier to transition from creating ideas to arragnging, mixing, mastering – more pads, can be played as an instrument but can also control session view – audio recording is too basic at this point – just loop recording, no proper editing of recorded audio But it still also offers tight integration with Ableton Live 11 when connected to a computer. – software is not a complete DAW, hard to arrange and finish tracks, yet it’s quite complex for a simple drum machine. With a processor it can function as a fully standalone instrument, like the Maschine+. – can be used to control other software or as a VST in other DAW’s – cooler performance features with the new updates and the touch strip with the perform fx – full version of Maschine software with a nice, comprehensive sound library and NI plugins with Komplete Select – built-in audio interface for the same price – more immersive, faster hardware workflow, This video is an update to my older video “Maschine MK3 vs Ableton Push 2 Comparison & Buying Advice” – ➡️ Get 7% off DistroKid for the first year through my link →
