![]() ![]() I haven’t had such a good time since I got the Access Virus for the first time many years ago. Needless to say I went totally bonkers with all those rotary knobs, beating the hell out of the presets. I updated Analog Lab Lite the same day I got keyboards, and for just €29 EUR I got 5,000 sounds instead the 500 that come with the Lite version, which comes bundled with the keyboard. The companion software is perfectly integrated with the keyboard itself, adding a whole new dimension to the package. Keys are rock solid jumping back straightaway, allowing us to play fast parts without any trouble. It is a very solid and compact mini keyboard with almost the same keyboard action than I have on my main, big fancy MIDI keyboard from a well-known developer. I was quite impressed with this piece of gear. A rock solid keyboard with perfectly integrated software. If there's 2 Analog Lab dll's, (most likely a 32bit and a 64bit version) try pointing to one of the folders 1st and then to the 2nd if the 1st didn't work.When the sum is far more than its parts. The folder where that *.dll file is, is the folder (or one above, if it's on an "Arturia" sub-folder) you should point Ableton Live to. To find that out, you can do a windows search for "Analog*.dll" and look in the resulting list for an "Analog Lab.dll" or "Analog Lab 2.dll" file. If neither of those paths above have *.dll files, then those must be installed on another folder. If you're running Live 32bit, maybe the " C:\Program Files (x86)\VSTPlugins" folder is actually empty (with no *.dll files or sub-folders with *.dll's). ![]() ![]() If you're running Live 64bit, the correct folder would be " C:\Program Files\VSTPlugins", if that folder contains *.dll's files (or sub-folders with those *.dll's) At the end of that line it should say 32-bit or 64-bit To check that, in Live, go to Help, About Live. Ok, first you need to be sure what type of Ableton Live version you're using: 32bit or 64bit? Sorry for the delay (too much stuff to focus on!) Hope this helps and that it works for you Then it should be like I described in the beginning of this post, once the scanning stops. If the "Use VST Plug-In Custom Folder" is "Off" click it to turn it "On" and wait for the auto-scan that'll happen. If nothing happens after setting the new VST path, try clicking "Rescan" after finding out where are your VST installed and knowing which Ableton Live flavour are you running (64bit or 32bit) then you can go to Live's Options, Preferences, File Folder side-tab and in the Plug-in Sources section, click the "Browse" button in the "VST Plug-In Custom Folder" and navigate through the file-system until you get to the folder where your VSTs (sub-folders) are installed (keep in mind the 64bit/32bit thing, where Live 32bit will only work with 32bit VSTs). Personally, I use a custom folder path for VSTs, so I have to type it on each new plug-in installation (fortunately, when updating, Arturia's installers remember the previous paths, which makes the process less tiresome/troublesome for those with non-default folder paths). (for the 32bit VSTs, if you still use Ableton Live 32bit) (when you're on Windows 64bit but use Ableton Live 32bit, the "x86" or "32bit" folders hold the 32bit VSTs usable with Ableton Live 32bit)Ĭ:\Program Files (x86)\Steinberg\VSTPlugins\ On Windows, these are the default paths installers usually suggest to use: On a Mac, apparently, this is how and where If you simply clicked Next/OK on the installation, the folder paths should be the default ones, so you need to point Ableton to them. So you installed Analog Lab on a Mac or Windows PC?ĭid you see in what path the VSTs (the plug-in. If the Analog Lab name shows up in the left-side Plug-In Devices browser (you have to click the little Plug icon on the left tab list), then you're set. Try on Ableton Live's Options, Preferences, File Folder side-tab and in the Plug-in Sources section, click the "Rescan" button and wait a little bit. First, you can try the quickest easiest way. ![]()
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