![]() Join us for part 3 then, and in the meantime check out our review of FL Studio 20 here. Next time we’ll finish our simple tune and start going in depth with more FL Studio 20 features. As we show, moving the bass onto the same track as the beats makes no difference as each Pattern will play the same thing no matter where you put it on the Playlist. As a traditional DAW user, you might want to keep the beats on one ‘track’ and the bass on another, but you don’t have to. Now we have a bass and two beat parts we can start arranging and here it’s a case of dragging each Pattern onto the Playlist area. But, one thing I cant get around is pattern organization. There are ups and downs to it, but in use its fine. Again, you could simply use the step sequencer to fill notes in but a more flexible approach brings in the Piano Roll editor that allows you to record in notes either by drawing or playing them in. Once it was implied that there would be no workaround in v12, I started training myself to stop using the blocks. This beginners tutorial shows how to enable and customize the new pattern blocks in the Playlist of FL11, you can easily emulate the legacy blocks this way. It's still in the code of the program though, fl studio just went full retard and removed the tick/untick option box. So in FL studio 11 and onwards, there's no option to enable it (normally it's enabled through options > general > enable legacy pattern blocks). After perfecting our sounds and beats, we move onto adding a synth bass. it's called legacy blocks, it's according to FL studio 'obselete' after fl studio 10. ![]() It’s also very fast and easy to change the core sounds at your disposal, so we’ll quickly run through how to either replace a sound or edit the existing one with the many effects on offer in FL Studio 20. Many traditional DAW owners will be acutely aware that looping beats is the scourge of modern music production, but this pattern-based approach allows you to quickly and easily introduce some much-needed variation. It allows you to quickly build up a library of different patterns simply by duplicating existing ones and then editing them for some variation. The advantage of using Patterns is quickly realised when using the Clone option from FL Studio’s many features. Open up FL Studio and you’ll be faced with an empty Pattern complete with four drum sounds, so we’ll launch straight into that and create a simple 4/4 drum pattern over four bars. You create complete tunes with this Pattern approach but, within it, the Piano Roll editor offers a familiar recording and editing environment for ‘traditional’ DAW users. Of course I use the clips for many elements (it seems that many trolls here think that we use block patterns exclusively : well, no), but I still dont figure out how to manage a project 'in a way that is convenient to me' without the pattern list clearly displayed passively (and no, 'Browser -> Current. Understanding just these two elements will give you that ‘Eureka’ moment, as you’ll realise that these are the core of the program. ![]() This time around we’re going to look at two of these areas – namely the Patterns and Piano Roll editor – in more depth. In Part 1 we introduced the five main areas within FL Studio – the Browser (for your samples, sounds, instruments, effects and so on) the Channel Rack (with Patterns for beats and notes) the Playlist (where the song arrangement comes together) the Piano Roll editor and finally the Mixer.
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