Akai APC40 Abelton Performance Controller

November 4th, 2009


Product Description
Ableton Live performance, perfected. The APC40 is the world’s finest Ableton Live control surface. Ableton and Akai Professional worked in a joint partnership to make the APC40 the perfect Ableton Live control surface. Whether you are an electronic-music performance artist and Live is your canvass, a DJ using Live to mix tracks, or a traditional musician using Live on stage or in the studio, the APC40 is designed for intuitive, powerful control. DIRECT DESIGN Because Akai Professional and Ableton designed the APC40 for Live, you don’t need to map its controls to talk to the software. Just connect your laptop to the APC40 with its USB cable and you’re ready to make magic. The APC40 is class compliant, so you don’t even need to install drivers. And if you’re an advanced Live user, the APC40 gives you the ability to remap every one of its controls to suit your own style. VIRTUAL VIEW The APC40 talks directly to Live and Live talks directly to the APC40. This exclusive bidirectional communication makes the APC40 an advanced controller in that it can receive feedback from the software and display it on its clip matrix of 40 triggers and on LED rings surrounding each knob. The clip matrix gives you an instant view of clip status: what’s loaded, what’s playing, and what’s being recorded. Each state displays on the matrix in a different color so you can get a quick picture of clip state. You can shift your clip focus and get an overview of the clips you have loaded for your set. The APC40 has 16 knobs, each surrounded by a ring of LEDs. These LED rings make seeing your settings a breeze on dark stages, indicating the currently selected parameters’ values. This advanced visual feedback makes performing with the APC40 focused more on the music and less on squinting at the computer screen. In fact, you might even forget that the computer is there! PREMIUM CONTROLS Ableton selected Akai Professional as a partner because of its leadership position in great-feeling controllers that are rock solid, rugged, and precise. From the legendary MPC series that changed the way music is made to the industry-standard MPD and MPK controllers, Akai Professional is revered by musicians, DJs, and producers everywhere for creating the feel that powers their creativity. The APC40 is built with a rugged, metal chassis and slip-proof rubber detailing. Knobs and faders are solid and precise for pinpoint performance. It even features a high quality, replaceable crossfader. CREATIVE CONTROL The APC40 comes with a special edition of Ableton Live Lite so you can use it out of the box even if you’re new to Live. There’s also a free patch that upgrades full versions of Live so if you’re already a Live user, you can take full advantage of the APC40. The APC40 has two banks of eight knobs. The first set controls Global parameters so you’ll always have instant access to your main sends, pans, and other essentials. The second bank of eight knobs is dynamically reassigned to the Track you select. You can control eight track parameters at a time, and as you switch channels, the Track knobs follow your focus. You also get special clip-status views and feedback that only the APC40’s matrix can display. The matrix is not limited to only 40 clips: you can scroll and shift, enabling access to an unlimited number of cells. The APC40 has a wide range of controllers. The eight Global knobs can access four banks of controls; the eight Track knobs control nine different track parameters each. This gives you a massive total of 72 controllers that are dynamically reassigned. Channel faders, bus faders, and a crossfader give you smooth control of key values. You have even more control power with special controls including Tap Tempo, Tempo Nudge, record enables, solo/cues and two assignable footswitch inputs. Designed in partnership with Ableton, the APC40 is the most advanced Live controller for the most advanced performers…. Read More

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3 Responses to “Akai APC40 Abelton Performance Controller”

  1. So, I got this little gizmo because I had taken a trip and needed another controller for a show. After messing around with it for an entire night, I can say it has it’s pros and cons.

    pros:

    its really really easy to use. the apc40 is a pretty intuitive piece of equiptment. You just plug it in and go, it really is that simple.

    cons:

    If you have OSX, you are stuck with the “akai” version of ableton. Have fun NOT using that. You can’t map anything unless you have Max for Live, and so forget trying to set other buttons. In my opinion, it doesn’t have enough effects options, or options for anything else.

    If you are smart and use Live for more than just switching audio clips (lol), than you probably want to look for something different.

    Also, i’m sure this is something that will be fixed in the future, but there are some major latency and selection bugs when using knobs and faders quickly, if you are a fast moving DJ than you do NOT want thing.

    Overall:

    get it and try it out, its a really cool piece of hardware, just not developed enough.

  2. Bjørn Borud says:

    The APC40 feels like a quality product. The knobs and sliders have good feel, the buttons are precise. The integration with the software (Ableton Live 8) is surprisingly intuitive and I managed to figure out how to use the APC40 within a few minutes of playing around with it.

    The only thing I am missing is some more visual cues that makes it easier to see which “track control” knobs belong to which track. A backlit LCD might be a good idea for the next revision.

  3. I’ve been drooling over this since it was announced, and I am so happy that I finally broke down and bought one. It’s a shame that there are no reviews up yet, so let me be the first to say that this controller is amazing. Make sure that you erase any previous midi mapping that you’ve done and then restart Ableton, and you’ll find that it has perfectly automapped itself. At first I thought that it was a little strange that there’s no manual included… but after five minutes, I realized that it DOESN’T NEED A MANUAL. That’s just how intuitive it is, from top to bottom.

    The hardware itself is up to usual Akai standards: the knobs and faders feel weighty and responsive. This thing is both larger and thinner than I thought it would be, but after playing around with it the size feels perfect. The two-way communication is killer- just drop an audio clip into Live and it will instantly appear on the grid, color-coded to match its status. Recording and triggering loops couldn’t be easier, and the entire interface perfectly emulates what you’re used to seeing on the screen.

    In the upper right-hand corner you have control over the pan and sends A through C for tracks 1-8, which is really nice. My only complaint is that I would have preferred to have it become all the sends for whatever track is highlighted, but I’ll get used to the new workflow. Part of what makes Ableton Live great is that it accommodates so many different styles of music, so making a universal controller for the program was a bit of a challenge. Akai really stepped up and once you get your hands on it, you’ll see what all the hype is about: this really is the be-all and end-all of hardware for the program.

    One downside I’ve found is that navigating the plugins can be sort of clunky. First you highlight a track and then the knobs in the lower right are assigned to the first plugin you’ve placed there. Then you use the left and right buttons to scroll through each unit, and when you do the knobs reassign themselves to control the appropriate effects. I find that having to click through them all is sort of difficult, but there’s nothing stopping me from using the mouse like I used to. I guess the only thing that is stopping me from handing out a 5-star rating is that the APC40 sort of forces you to use the workflow they’ve designed. Remapping the controls isn’t difficult, but everything is laid-out and labeled in such a way that it sort of corrals you into getting used to doing things their way.

    This review is starting to look a little long, so I’ll just sum it up: I absolutely love this thing. I wish I had picked it up sooner and if you are AT ALL considering this purchase, just do it already. Well-constructed, well-programmed, and absolutely worth the money. Like me, you’re probably used to using an assortment of controllers and you’re wondering if you need to spend the cash. Well, this thing will replace all of those and more, and you’ll quickly get used to the layout. Just do it!

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