Livid Instruments Ohm64
MIDI Control Surface
Reviews : MIDI Controller
The Ohm64 is the latest in a recent rash of grid-based control surfaces. Does it stand out from the crowd?
Nick Rothwell
Grid-based control surfaces, it would appear, are rather like London buses: theres nothing for ages, and then four come along at once. Weve had the Monome 64 (reviewed in the September 2008 issue of SOS), the minimal, boutique, hand-crafted wooden button grid with its community-led collection of software tools and applications; Akais APC40 (reviewed in the September 2009 issue of SOS), a dedicated controller featuring faders and knobs as well as a button matrix, and designed for tight integration with Abletons Live software; and Novations new Launchpad (reviewed in the December 2009 issue), a slim, buttons-only controller again designed for use with Ableton Live. If that wasnt enough grid action already, let me introduce you to the Livid Instruments Ohm64, another device featuring a central button grid flanked by additional controls.
Introduction
Livid Instruments were formed in 2003, and the Ohm64 actually has a heritage reaching back to early experimental instruments custom-built from 2000 onwards, so this isnt just a me-too item designed to cash in on the current fashion for grids. Livid have a background in the VJ scene — they also sell VJ and video-processing software — and the previous generation of Ohm64 (known now as the Ohm Classic) was a grid controller aimed firmly at the VJ performance market. The Ohm64 upgrades the Ohm Classic with features designed to appeal to both the video and the music market, such as physical MIDI ports. This makes perfect sense: many artists would argue that the boundary between music and visual performance is becoming increasingly blurred, so a hybrid controller seems like a natural evolutionary step.
The Ohm64 bears a lot of similarities to the Monome: its a wooden-cased, hand-assembled USB device with a grid of illuminated silicone buttons. Unlike the APC40 and Launchpad, both of which feature tri-colour LEDs, the Ohm64s illumination is a monochromatic blue. Unlike the Monome, the Ohm64 has numeric labels on most of its buttons, so it compromises minimalism in the name of practicality.
Compared to the Monome, the Ohm64 is surprisingly large. Its wide enough to be rackmountable, and six Monome 64s would fit onto the same desk space. This is partly because the button grid is relatively large in scale, and partly because of the room needed for the Ohm64s additional controls. Each side of the button grid is a control area roughly styled after a mixing desk, and one mental model of the Ohm64 might be as an eight-channel mixing control surface that has been cut down the middle to have a button grid inserted. Each left-hand channel has a fader, three knobs and one button; the right-hand channels are the same, except that they have only a single knob each, to leave room for some global controls. Underneath the button grid are a DJ-style crossfader and two additional buttons.
Despite using terms like mixer and channel, there is no requirement to treat the Ohm64s knobs and faders as conventional mixing controls: as a MIDI device it is completely generic, and applications can be mapped to the controls in any way you wish, respecting or ignoring the numeric labels on the buttons.
The rear panel of the Ohm64 carries a USB socket and a pair of MIDI DIN sockets (one In, one Out), which is rare for controllers these days. (None of the other grid controllers Ive mentioned have physical MIDI ports.) The device is USB powered and class-compliant: it operates as a standard MIDI device in OS X and Windows without additional drivers.
In Use

Ohm64Editor, the dedicated application for configuring the Ohm64 and altering its MIDI behaviour.
Ohm64Editor, the dedicated application for configuring the Ohm64 and altering its MIDI behaviour.
Due to its size and layout, the Ohm64 is clearly designed to be positioned centrally for studio or stage use. Ergonomically, the controls fall neatly under ones hands, one fader per finger, with everything else within easy reach. The faders have a smooth, quality feel to them. Sadly — but unsurprisingly at this price point — the faders are not motorised, and the knobs are potentiometers rather than infinite encoders, the ring illumination around the knobs being static, but if you are happy with your softwares ability to latch to controller movements, this shouldnt be a problem.
The Ohm64 operates as a generic MIDI controller, sending MIDI note events for button presses and controller events for fader and knob movements. It receives MIDI to turn on and off the button LEDs.
As a MIDI input device, the Ohm64 can be used directly with any MIDI software that allows notes and controllers to be mapped or learned — and theres a MIDI-style local control mode, where button presses illuminate the LEDs directly, without software support. The device can also be employed purely as a hardware MIDI controller, using its own physical MIDI Out port, although for technical reasons it still needs to be connected to a running MIDI application on a computer via its USB port.
Software applications see the Ohm64 as a twin-port MIDI device (where each port comprises a MIDI In and a MIDI Out): one port addresses the Ohm64s own controls, and the other is patched through to the Ohm64s physical MIDI sockets, allowing it to be used as a generic 1x1 MIDI interface.
Bundled Software

LividStep, the Max For Live step sequencer for the Ohm64, showing the button and LED display panel.
LividStep, the Max For Live step sequencer for the Ohm64, showing the button and LED display panel.
The Ohm64 isnt shipped with a CD containing bundled software, but lots is available for download from Livids web site. Most important is Ohm64Editor, an editor that gives access to all of the Ohm64s settings, and enables them to be stored in the devices Flash RAM. The editor allows the MIDI note and controller bindings of the faders, knobs and buttons to be changed, and supports presets for changing the entire state of the device. There are utility screens for altering MIDI modes, and demo features, such as an ASCII character display function for the button grid.
Every Ohm64 comes with a licence key for CellDNA, Livids own commercial VJ performance software. CellDNA has special support for the Ohm64, so the units controls are pre-mapped to video-processing parameters and its LEDs light up to indicate active video clips.
Livids web site offers a selection of additional free downloads, all implemented as MaxMSP patchers and available freely in source form. OhmSound, for example, is a simple FM synthesizer, with the Ohm64s button grid operating as a keyboard and its panel of knobs mapped to synthesis parameters. LividSampler is a basic sample-triggering program.
Every grid controller needs a step sequencer, and the Ohm64 is no exception: LividStep is a multitrack sequencer implemented in Max For Live, so it runs as a control interface inside Ableton Live, allowing interactive editing and sequencing within up to eight MIDI tracks. It makes good use of the Ohm64s control layout: the grid buttons represent the quantised notes in each of the tracks, while the knobs and faders map to instrument parameters and mixing controls, so the functions of sound editing and sequencing are combined into a single interface. Documentation is sparse, but there are tutorial videos on-line which present the sequencers major features. Of course, you need both Ableton Live and Max For Live in order to use it, so its only really of academic interest if you dont already own both packages.
Finally, the Ohm64 capitalises on the large body of applications already written for the Monome, via an emulator called MonomeBridge, which translates the Monomes OSC network protocol into the Ohm64s MIDI System Exclusive messages. In practice, this works well enough, although sharp-eyed observers might notice that LED refreshing is slightly slower than with a real Monome, possible due to performance overheads in the emulator or the USB MIDI link. Realistically, though, this is unlikely to pose problems unless you are very fussy about visual display.
Conclusions
Choice of control surface is a very personal thing: even though the device itself may not make any sound, it has to feel as comfortable and intuitive as an actual musical instrument. Particular devices will work for some people and not others, purely due to personal taste.
The Ohm64 is relatively large, and is laid out in a manner that only really works if its treated as your main controller. Used in that way, it functions very well: its built and finished to a high standard, and the controls are arranged clearly and ergonomically. If you already have a grid controller and a fader box or two, the chief argument in favour of the Ohm64 is its integrated design, minimal cabling, and rear-panel MIDI connectors.
If youre a video artist, you get a free licence for CellDNA and are potentially good to go. As a musician, you can assign the Ohm64s controls to generate whatever MIDI data you want and link it into existing software, or fire up the Monome emulator and use any of the free Monome music applications. Of all the Livid applications, the LividStep sequencer is the most engaging, but only of real interest to Max for Live users.
I like the Ohm64 a lot, and if its faders were motorised Id buy one in a shot, but as the owner of a Monome, a Motor Mix, a Novation Remote, an Emu Launchpad and a Peavey PC1600, I really need to kick my controller-buying habit. However, if the Ohm64s design and feature set appeal to you, you should definitely give it some consideration. 0