Drum Booth - Drum Booth contains carefully curated samples of acoustic kits recorded in a tight, dry room.What’s more, all of the loop-/riff-based arrangement options are still available on the timeline, so you can continue to edit and build on your song, even after you record it to the session view. And when you record your progression to the linear Arrangement View, you add the possibility to record lead lines and other performances that fall outside the rest of the song structure. Using scenes makes it easy to arrange entire songs in parts (verse, chorus, etc). In addition to launching individual clips, you can launch entire scenes, complete with automatic advancement to subsequent scenes, scene repeat instructions, and other logic options. In fact, the songwriting tools don’t stop there. Since everything from modern electronic music to classic rock and blues is heavily based on repeating sections, Live’s Session View makes it an ideal creative tool for all kinds of songwriters.
Launched individually, these loops let you experiment with your arrangements, trying out various combinations of grooves and riffs. Clips are usually short pieces of audio or MIDI a few measures long or shorter, which loop to create grooves. Each scene contains a slot on each channel for a clip. Where Live differs from other DAWs is its Session View, which puts individual tracks on the X axis and scenes on the Y axis. The Arrangement View is more or less a standard linear DAW, with time on the X axis and tracks on the Y axis. There are two main parts to Live: the Session View, and the Arrangement View. That largely has to do with the way Live lets you construct tracks and play with audio in real time.
From the beginning, Ableton Live has been as much a creative tool as a DAW.