AI Voice Control for Ableton Live

Yes, you can control Ableton Live with your voice. LIA is an AI assistant that listens to a spoken request and carries it out inside your Ableton Live session, so you can build a drum pattern, add a bassline, or sketch a melody without reaching for the mouse. You speak your request, LIA interprets it, and the result lands as editable MIDI and session changes you keep shaping. It is a producer conversation that builds while you play, not a finished-song generator. You talk to LIA from any browser or your phone, and a lightweight local LIA Bridge carries the request into Ableton Live on macOS and Windows.

Speak a request, LIA carries it out in Ableton Live

The idea is simple. With Ableton Live open and the LIA Bridge connected, you describe what you want out loud, and LIA answers with editable MIDI in your session. Ask for a four-bar drum pattern at 140 BPM, a darker bassline, or a melody to sit over your chords, and LIA places an editable MIDI clip where you need it. Because your hands stay on the keyboard and the controls, voice is useful when you are mid-take, sketching fast, or just keeping the flow going without stopping to click through menus.

Voice control and prompt MIDI

LIA responds to spoken commands, written prompts, and reference direction, then creates editable MIDI inside Ableton Live. The output is a starting point you refine in the piano roll, not a converted recording or a finished track.

Voice plus editable MIDI keeps you in control

A spoken request does not lock you into whatever LIA returns. Everything it creates lands as editable MIDI clips in your piano roll, so you move notes, change velocities, swap instruments, and rework the groove until it is yours. Reference and style direction are a starting point, not a copy of protected material, and any mix help arrives as suggestions you decide whether to act on. Voice is a faster way to ask; the output is still editable material you finish on your own terms, and you keep creative control over the result.

How voice control connects and where it runs

You speak to LIA from any browser or your phone, and the request travels to your computer through the LIA Bridge, a lightweight local app for macOS and Windows that sends control commands only, never your audio or project files. Ableton Live is the current Bridge integration; other DAWs such as FL Studio, Logic Pro, and Cubase are not supported yet, but you can join the waitlist for updates. Voice input uses your app language where it is supported, and the interface is available in several languages, so the waitlist is where to watch for further updates.

Can I really control Ableton Live with my voice?

Yes. Speak a request out loud and LIA carries it out inside your Ableton Live session through the LIA Bridge. Ask for a drum pattern, a bassline, or a melody, and LIA places an editable MIDI clip in your session. The notes land in the piano roll, where you keep shaping them.

What can I ask LIA to create?

Ask for melodies, chord progressions, basslines, drum patterns, beat ideas, or reference-guided variations. LIA returns editable MIDI inside Ableton Live and you keep shaping the result.

Does voice control write lyrics or make a finished song?

No. Voice control runs production actions and returns editable MIDI inside Ableton Live. It does not write lyrics into a song and it is not a finished-track generator. LIA is an assistant that gives you a starting point in the piano roll, which you re-instrument, arrange, and finish yourself.

Which language do I speak to LIA in?

You speak naturally, and LIA voice input uses your app language where it is supported. Support varies by language, so if voice in your language is important for your setup, join the waitlist and we will share updates as they ship.

Which DAW and platforms does voice control work with?

Ableton Live on macOS and Windows is the current Bridge integration. You speak to LIA from any browser or your phone. Other DAWs are not live integrations yet, and you can join the waitlist for updates.

Which DAW do you use?

Tell us which DAW you produce in. We use this to plan support priorities.