Mastering Audio Sampling and Resampling on Ableton Move
Learn how to sample, slice, and resample audio on Ableton Move. Simon Lyon shows you how to capture sounds, organize them, and create playable instruments with ease.
From Field Recording to Drum Rack Magic — Everything You Need to Know About Sampling on Move
If you’re new to Ableton Move and want to unlock the full potential of recording, resampling, and managing audio, this video by Simon Lyon is your essential starting point. In this deep-dive tutorial, Simon demonstrates how to use every available input, load and repurpose your samples, and organize them via the built-in Move Manager — all without needing a laptop.
Whether you’re capturing a melody on the fly, slicing VHS dialogue into playable pads, or layering resampled grooves, Move gives you serious creative freedom.
Sampling With the Built-In Microphone
Simon begins by showing how easy it is to capture audio using Move’s built-in mic — ideal for recording environmental sounds, vocal ideas, or quick instrument takes when you’re on the go. Once recorded, you can:
- Trim your sample
- Assign it to a pad
- Add reverb or playback FX
- Play it across keys in “16 Pitches” mode
It’s simple, fast, and fun — perfect for producers who like to stay mobile and spontaneous.
Sampling External Sources via Audio Input
Using a stereo mini-jack input, Simon demonstrates sampling directly from an iPad — in this case, pulling audio from a classic VHS video. You can:
- Record directly into a drum rack
- Assign each sample to a pad
- Trigger pads individually or slice samples live across multiple pads
- Then pitch, edit, and apply effects per pad
Each pad can have its own unique start point, playback mode (Gate or Trigger), and custom FX — allowing for maximum control.
Unlocking “16 Pitches” Mode
Once a sample is assigned to a pad, you can instantly switch to 16 Pitches mode, enabling you to:
- Play melodies using a single sample
- Pitch-shift drum hits, vocal chops, or bass notes
- Extend a single sound across a wide key range
This is especially powerful when used with sample-based instruments or chopped phrases.
Sample Organization With Move Manager
Hold Shift and navigate to the Move Manager, where you can:
- Rename or delete recordings
- Sort and organize samples
- Upload new files via web browser (move.local)
Simon demonstrates uploading folders like “Breaks & Beats” from a desktop, instantly making them available on Move. Once stored, samples can be loaded into any instrument or pad — and renamed for easy access.
Resampling: Capture “What You Hear”
A huge highlight of the video is resampling — capturing your entire mix or isolated elements onto a new pad. You can:
- Combine multiple clips or layers into one loop
- Capture effects or real-time performance gestures
- Resample onto spare pads within the same drum rack
- Keep layering creatively like a hardware-based bounce
Simon shows how to resample both live audio and previously recorded clips — a game-changing feature for building layered textures or drum kits from scratch.
Advanced Drum Rack Customization
Every sample pad in Move’s drum rack can be tailored with:
- Playback FX (e.g., Grain, Stretch, 8-bit)
- Filter types (individual per pad)
- Panning and volume
- Gate or Trigger playback
- Choke groups for realistic hi-hat behavior
This level of control makes the Move’s drum rack a powerful sampler and performance tool in one.
Final Thoughts
From capturing sound in the wild to building full instrument kits and resampled grooves, Ableton Move is more than just a groovebox — it’s a flexible, portable sampler. Whether you’re producing beats on the go or preparing stems for export into Ableton Live Intro (included), Move lets you build complete musical ideas without touching a computer.
Explore, experiment, and don’t forget to organize your samples — you’ll thank yourself later.




