Producing Low Ends with Audio Units
Crafting a powerful low end is one of the biggest challenges in techno production. Without a solid foundation, even the strongest musical ideas can lack impact and fail to translate into the feeling and energy that define the genre. As techno continues to evolve, different styles have developed their own approaches to kick drums, sub bass, basslines and groove, making it essential to understand not only the techniques, but also the reasoning behind them.
This masterclass takes you from the fundamentals to more advanced production methods through 16 different low-end techniques used across a wide spectrum of hypnotic techno. Along the way, you’ll learn essential processing techniques such as EQ, compression, saturation, distortion, filtering, envelopes and gain staging, while also exploring sound design for supporting elements that complement the low end. Every chapter focuses on a practical workflow, helping you understand the complete anatomy of the techno low end—from its tone and timbre to its movement, groove and purpose.
Built on over a decade of Audio Units’ production experience, this 5h 59m masterclass is designed for producers of all skill levels. Whether you’re building your first low end or refining an existing workflow, you’ll develop a deeper understanding of the techniques, creative decisions and production mindset behind modern hypnotic techno.
This masterclass is taught entirely in English. Please be advised before making the purchase.
Hailing from Bangalore, Audio Units are brothers Ashwin and Ashrith operating with a shared sensibility shaped by structure, restraint, and an enduring curiosity for sound. Their work navigates tension, repetition, and atmosphere, pushing techno forward without severing its ties to tradition.
Their catalogue on Molecular, Newrhythmic, Dynamic Reflection, and Illegal Alien positions them among the most formidable names to emerge from India’s electronic landscape. Touring extensively across Europe, the Middle East, Asia, and Australia, they have carved an uncommon international trajectory. At Goa’s iconic Hilltop, their residency Genesis stands as a considered curatorial statement — a monthly gathering where carefully invited figures from the global techno circuit meet a deeply rooted local vision.
Their music has found support from a wide spectrum of respected artists including DVS1, Richie Hawtin, Dax J, Ben Sims, Truncate, Chris Liebing, Luke Slater, Sandwell District, The Advent, Dasha Rush, Marron, and Rødhad, while appearing on revered stages such as Berghain, Bassiani, Stone Techno Festival, and Awakenings. The Mind Medizin vinyl EP, remixed by Ben Sims, further reinforces their presence within the international canon.
Beyond the studio and stage, Observant serves as their platform for dialogue connecting Indian artists with global counterparts through a shared language of sound. Their long-standing educational initiative at Beatworx has quietly shaped generations of producers and DJs, contributing meaningfully to the growth and sustainability of India’s electronic culture.
What emerges is not spectacle, but conviction — a body of work that rewards attention, values patience, and affirms Audio Units as a singular voice within contemporary techno.
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Crafting a powerful low end is one of the biggest challenges in techno production. Without a solid foundation, even the strongest musical ideas can lack impact and fail to translate into the feeling and energy that define the genre. As techno continues to evolve, different styles have developed their own approaches to kick drums, sub bass, basslines and groove, making it essential to understand not only the techniques, but also the reasoning behind them.
This masterclass takes you from the fundamentals to more advanced production methods through 16 different low-end techniques used across a wide spectrum of hypnotic techno. Along the way, you'll learn essential processing techniques such as EQ, compression, saturation, distortion, filtering, envelopes and gain staging, while also exploring sound design for supporting elements that complement the low end. Every chapter focuses on a practical workflow, helping you understand the complete anatomy of the techno low end—from its tone and timbre to its movement, groove and purpose.
Built on over a decade of Audio Units' production experience, this 6 hour masterclass is designed for producers of all skill levels. Whether you're building your first low end or refining an existing workflow, you'll develop a deeper understanding of the techniques, creative decisions and production mindset behind modern hypnotic techno.
Chapter 1: Deep Techno Low End [128 BPM]
Building the Foundations
This chapter introduces the fundamental principles behind building a deep hypnotic techno low end using an 808 kick drum, Ableton Live Operator for sub bass and bassline design, and essential processing techniques. Along the way, you'll learn key beginner concepts including gain staging, tuning, modulation, pitch envelopes and group processing, while avoiding many of the common pitfalls encountered during low-end production.
Topics
1.1 Using an 808 Kit and Ableton Max for Live DS Kick
1.2 Processing the Kick Drum with Ableton Live Drum Buss
1.3 Gain Staging Between Audio Processors
1.4 Tuning vs. Not Tuning Your Kick
1.5 Ideal Frequency Ranges for Low-End Elements
1.6 Creating a Bassline Using Ableton Live Operator
1.7 Applying Essential Modulations
1.8 Adding Sub Grooves
1.9 Understanding Pitch Envelopes
1.10 Using Velocity to Adjust Groove
1.11 Group Processing
Chapter 2: Gritty Low End [132 BPM] [40:00]
Power Through Saturation
This chapter focuses on creating a gritty, driven low end where the majority of the track's energy comes from the interaction between the kick drum and bass. You'll learn a classic reverb rumble technique, explore the principles of reverb, saturation and overdrive, design complementary bass elements, and mix the low end using Ableton Live's built-in devices.
Topics
2.1 Using a 909 Kick
2.2 Creating a Sub Using Reverb
2.3 Deep Dive into the Principles of Reverb
2.4 Deep Dive into Overdrive and Saturation
2.5 Sound Design for Complementary Bass Elements
2.6 Creative Ways to Introduce Groove
2.7 Mixing Down the Low End
Chapter 3: Clean Low End [138 BPM]
Simplicity with Maximum Impact
This chapter explores a clean, functional low end that works across a wide range of techno styles and tempos. You'll shape a kick drum using Ableton Max for Live DS Kick, create a powerful sub bass from white noise, explore sidechaining and groove generation, and design supporting elements that complement the overall low-end foundation.
Topics
3.1 Synthesising a Kick with Ableton Max for Live DS Kick
3.2 Creating a Sub Bass Using White Noise
3.3 Using Cableguys ShaperBox 3 for Sidechaining
3.4 Using Ableton Live's Euclidean Generator for Additional Groove
3.5 Sound Design with Ableton Max for Live DS Kick for Additional Elements
Chapter 4: Rolling Bassline Low End [138 BPM]
Creating Movement Through Groove
Building on the previous chapter, you'll use the existing sub layer as the foundation for creating a rolling bassline commonly found in high-energy hypnotic techno. The focus is on designing an expressive bassline, working creatively with recorded audio, shaping supporting drums and understanding the role of stereo and mono bass within the mix.
Topics
4.1 Using the Noise Rumble from the Previous Chapter
4.2 Sound Designing a Bassline with u-he Diva
4.3 Working Creatively with Recorded Audio
4.4 Sound Designing Drums with Ableton Max for Live DS Hats
4.5 Stereo vs. Mono Bass
Chapter 5: Building a Low End with the 909 Core Kit [140 BPM]
Creativity Through Limitation
This chapter challenges you to build an entire low end using nothing but Ableton Live's built-in 909 Core Drum Kit and creative processing techniques. You'll learn how to shape, tune and saturate drum sounds, design supporting elements, fill the low-mid range with groove, and reshape the kick drum to fit the context of your track while maintaining a cohesive, drum machine-inspired aesthetic.
Topics
5.1 Programming a Drum Pattern
5.2 Saturation and Gain Staging
5.3 Tuning Drum Sounds
5.4 Sound Design Using Ableton Live Drift and MDD Snake
5.5 Using Plugin Alliance Black Box Analog Design HG-2 for Additional Saturation
5.6 Filling the Low-Mid Range with Supporting Grooves
5.7 Parallel Processing with Ableton Live Drum Buss
5.8 Reshaping the Kick Drum to Fit the Context of Your Track
Chapter 6: Polyrhythmic Low End [137 BPM]
Evolving Call & Response Sequences
This chapter explores a polymetric approach to low-end design using 3, 5, 7 and 9-step sequences to create evolving call-and-response phrases. You'll also learn how to layer 808 and 909 kick drums into a single custom kick, design bass sounds and low bleeps, understand waveform selection in u-he Diva, and use LFOs and pitch envelopes to generate movement.
Topics
6.1 Layering 808 and 909 Kick Drums
6.2 Bass Sound Design with u-he Diva
6.3 Creating Low Bleeps with Ableton Live Operator
6.4 Understanding Basic Waveforms in u-he Diva
6.5 Creative Use of LFOs and Pitch Envelopes
Chapter 7: Frequency Pockets Low End [137 BPM]
Carving Space for Every Element
This chapter focuses on extracting sub bass and low-frequency information from a variety of sound sources, then using EQ to carve dedicated frequency pockets for each element. You'll create call-and-response grooves, generate supporting percussion, repurpose synth presets into bass elements, and explore sequencing techniques that bring movement and variation to the low end.
Topics
7.1 Creating Low Bleeps with Ableton Live Operator and ML-185
7.2 Creating a Sub Bass from a Guitar Audio Loop
7.3 Finding the Right Groove for Call and Response
7.4 Using EQ to Isolate and Pocket Sounds
7.5 Creating Supporting Groove with Toms
7.6 Extracting Bass from Any Synth Preset
7.7 Using the MK16-185 Sequencer
Chapter 8: Rumble Sequencing [140 BPM]
Turning Samples into Groove
This chapter explores sampling and sequencing low-frequency rumbles to create a tight, groove-driven low end. Starting with a rumble extracted from one of our own productions, you'll deconstruct and rebuild it from scratch before learning advanced processing techniques including saturation, compression, kick layering and supporting sound design.
Topics
8.1 Importing the Low End from a Previous Project
8.2 Deconstructing the Sounds
8.3 Sampling the Rumble
8.4 Heavy Processing with Soundtoys Decapitator
8.5 Using Ableton Live Glue Compressor to Bind the Sounds
8.6 Using Ableton Live Roar for Multiband Saturation
8.7 Creating a Three-Layer Kick Drum
8.8 Sound Design with Ableton Live Meld
Chapter 9: Fixing a Weak Low End [138 BPM]
Rescue & Reconstruction
This chapter demonstrates how to rescue a weak low end by identifying the missing frequencies, correcting common beginner mistakes and rebuilding the foundation using targeted processing techniques. You'll reshape the kick and bass, add transients and harmonics, layer additional kick drums effectively, and optimise envelope settings to transform an unbalanced low end into one suited for hypnotic techno.
Topics
9.1 Identifying What's Missing
9.2 Using Ableton Live Drum Buss to Shape the Kick and Bass
9.3 Using Pitch Envelopes in Ableton Live Sampler to Add Transients
9.4 Layering Ableton Max for Live DS Kick Effectively
9.5 Using Saturation to Add the Right Harmonics
9.6 Setting Decay Envelopes Correctly
Chapter 10: Forest Techno Low End [160 BPM]
Fast, Rolling & Psychedelic
This chapter explores low-end techniques tailored for faster, forest-inspired techno influenced by psychedelic trance. You'll shape a short, punchy kick with Ableton Max for Live DS Kick, design a rolling FM bassline in Ableton Live Operator, match the key of the kick and bass, experiment with modulation, and use sidechaining and compression to create a tightly controlled groove.
Topics
10.1 Creating a Broken Kick Pattern with Ableton Max for Live DS Kick
10.2 Using Ableton Live Operator for FM Bassline Sound Design
10.3 Key Matching the Kick and Bass
10.4 Sidechaining External Instruments with Cableguys ShaperBox 3
10.5 Using Slow and Fast LFO Modulations for Interaction
10.6 Using Compression to Balance Oscillator Levels
Chapter 11: Deep & Trippy Low End [138 BPM]
Crafting Effective Rhythms
This chapter focuses on creating a highly percussive low end inspired by deeper, tribal and rhythm-driven techno. You'll combine Ableton Max for Live DS Kick with an 808 kick drum, build a bassline from the kick itself, correct phase relationships, enhance transients and harmonic content, and explore creative clip-envelope automation techniques for expressive rhythmic variation.
Topics
11.1 Using Ableton Max for Live DS Kick with an 808 Kick
11.2 Correcting Phase Alignment Between the Kick Drums
11.3 Adding a Click with a Short Percussion Sample
11.4 Using Waves J37 Tape for Harmonic Saturation
11.5 Exploring Alternative Kick Designs with Sonic Academy Kick 3
Chapter 12: 90s Techno Low End [142 BPM]
Hardware Mindset, Modern Workflow
This chapter explores the production mindset and limitations of 1990s techno, when music was created entirely with hardware. You'll recreate classic low-end techniques using reverb and delay, design basslines and chord stabs inspired by the era, apply vintage-style processing, and capture an aesthetic that continues to influence modern techno production.
Topics
12.1 Using Roland Cloud TR-909 for the Kick Drum
12.2 Using ValhallaDelay for Bass Groove
12.3 Using Temecula MDV-II Reverb for Sub Bass
12.4 Bassline Sound Design with Roland Cloud SH-101
12.5 Creating Chord Stabs with Ableton Live Analog
12.6 Using the Akai RX-950 for Lo-Fi Processing
12.7 Using Vintage Mixing Console Emulations
12.8 Adding Wobble and Tape Imperfections with XLN Audio RC-20 Retro Color
Chapter 13: Distorted Kick Drum Low End [142 BPM]
Controlled Aggression
This chapter focuses on creating a heavily saturated and distorted kick drum that becomes the defining characteristic of the track. You'll explore multiple stages of analogue-style saturation and distortion, compare different processing chains, design supporting bass and synth elements, and discover how to push a kick drum to its limits while maintaining clarity and impact. Many of these techniques can also be adapted for harder styles such as hard techno, gabber and breakbeat techno.
Topics
13.1 Using Amp and Overdrive on a 909 Kick
13.2 Creating a Sub Bass with Ableton Live Operator
13.3 Synth Sound Design with Ableton Live Operator
13.4 Using Softube Harmonics for Warmth
13.5 Programming Drums with Roland Cloud TR-909
13.6 Comparing Processing with A/B Chains
13.7 Pentode and Triode Distortion with Plugin Alliance Black Box Analog Design HG-2
13.8 Using Looptrotter Plugins for Drive and Distortion
Chapter 14: Layered Subs Low End [138 BPM]
Three Layers, One Cohesive Groove
This chapter explores building a powerful low end using three independent sub layers that occupy different frequency ranges and interact through call and response. You'll create each sub using a different technique, learn creative sidechaining methods to prevent frequency masking, customise the kick drum, and glue the entire low end together with subtle analogue-style processing.
Topics
14.1 Shaping and Customising a Kick with Sonic Academy Kick 3
14.2 Using a Long Sub Bass Sample to Create the First Sub
14.3 Finding Gaps in the Groove for the Second Sub
14.4 Using a Short Sample to Create the Second Sub
14.5 Creating the Third Sub with Ableton Live Operator
14.6 Creative Use of Sidechaining
14.7 Processing the Group with Plugin Alliance Black Box Analog Design HG-2
Chapter 15: Groovy Techno Low End [144 BPM]
Rolling Energy Through Resampling
This chapter focuses on building a fast, rolling low end inspired by modern hardgroove techno. You'll synthesise a kick drum from scratch in Ableton Live Operator, generate abstract percussion with Fors Opal, resample and manipulate recorded audio into bass and rhythmic elements, and combine modulation, granular processing and drum programming to create a stripped-back yet energetic groove.
Topics
15.1 Synthesising a Kick from Scratch in Ableton Live Operator
15.2 Jamming with Fors Opal for Randomised Sounds
15.3 Creating Sub Bass and Percussion from Audio Recordings
15.4 Using LFOs with EQ for Movement and Groove
15.5 Supporting Sound Design with Ableton Live Granulator
15.6 Using Ableton Live Sampler to Chop Audio for Percussion
15.7 Programming a Complementary Drum Pattern
Chapter 16: Funky Low End [144 BPM]
Harmonic Groove & Musicality
The final chapter explores a more harmonic approach to low-end design, where the bass follows a musical scale and works naturally alongside chords and melodic elements. You'll customise an existing bass preset in Xfer Serum 2, generate musical ideas using Ableton Live's Seed Generator, process the bass with multiband saturation, and finish by designing complementary organ stabs to complete the groove.
Topics
16.1 Creating a Bassline with Xfer Serum 2
16.2 Simple Tweaks to Customise a Preset
16.3 Processing the Bassline with Ableton Live Roar
16.4 Organ Stab Sound Design with Ableton Live Operator
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