AI MIDI Generator for Tech House in Ableton Live
Tech House thrives on groove precision—tight kick-clap patterns at 124 BPM, rolling basslines that lock to the kick, conga and shaker layers that breathe, and minimal chord stabs that punctuate without crowding. Building that pocket manually means programming 16th-note hi-hat variations, drawing bassline slides that hit just before the beat, and layering percussion so each element sits in its own frequency slot. Miss the groove window by a few ticks and the track feels stiff instead of hypnotic.
How do producers make Tech House midi generator in Ableton manually?
VIXSOUND generates editable Tech House MIDI directly inside Ableton Live—four-on-the-floor kicks with velocity variation, syncopated basslines in Am or Gm that follow the root and fifth, offbeat clap patterns, conga rolls on the 2 and 4, closed hat 16ths with swing, and sparse chord stabs using minor sevenths or sus chords. Every clip lands on your timeline ready to route to Drum Rack, Operator for the bass, or Wavetable for stabs. You tweak note timing, add filter automation, adjust velocity curves, layer your own samples, and sidechain the bass to the kick—VIXSOUND handles the initial grid so you focus on sound design and arrangement.
How does VIXSOUND generate Tech House midi generator?
Output is fully yours, no royalties, no attribution, ready to bounce stems or send to a label.
At a glance
| Genre | Tech House |
| Typical BPM | 122–128 |
| Common keys | Am, Cm, Dm, Fm, Gm |
| Vibe | Groovy, percussive, club-ready |
| Drums | Tight kick, conga and shaker grooves, snappy clap |
| Bass | Plucked rolling bassline, often filtered |
How VIXSOUND generates Tech House midi generator
Setup
Open VIXSOUND chat inside Ableton Live and type your request—specify Tech House, the BPM (typically 122–128), the key (Am, Cm, Dm, Fm, or Gm), and which elements you need: kick pattern, bassline, percussion, or chord stabs. VIXSOUND generates MIDI clips and drops them onto new tracks in your session. The kick clip uses C1 in Drum Rack with velocity accents on the 1 and ghost notes for shuffle; claps sit on 2 and 4 with occasional offbeat hits; hi-hats run 16th notes with swing and velocity ramps.
What VIXSOUND generates
The bassline clip uses root and fifth movement, often starting on the offbeat, with slides and short note lengths for that plucked filter-sweep sound—route it to Operator with a saw wave and envelope decay around 200 ms, then sidechain to the kick using Ableton's Compressor. Chord stabs appear as two- or three-note voicings (minor seventh, sus2) on the upbeat, ready for Wavetable with a short amp envelope. Congas and shakers land on separate MIDI tracks with varied velocities; map them to Simpler or your sample library.
Edit and arrange
Edit notes in the piano roll, quantize to taste, add automation for filter cutoff or reverb send, and layer your own one-shots or vocal chops.
Try it free for 7 daysCopy-paste prompts
Paste any of these into the VIXSOUND chat inside Ableton Live to get started fast.
Frequently asked questions
How does VIXSOUND generate Tech House MIDI inside Ableton?
Can I edit the MIDI after VIXSOUND generates it?
Does VIXSOUND understand Tech House groove and sound design?
Do I need music theory knowledge to use this for Tech House?
Who owns the MIDI VIXSOUND generates?
How much does VIXSOUND cost for Tech House MIDI generation?
Stop reading. Start producing.
Open Ableton Live, type what you want, and let VIXSOUND handle the MIDI, sounds, stems, and arrangement.