RBH Posted February 9, 2019 Share Posted February 9, 2019 (edited) I've been a long time user and have always worked in real time - never employing a snap or grid or quantizing - on purpose by the way. I have a version of JOSE ' that I worked up a long time ago. It's currently a working version made with recorded guitars and bass - and has midi accompaniment for keys and drums. In this instance, I loaded up the original CD track after all my basics were in place and use it as a reference for mixing and editing only. This is home studio stuff for my own education and fun. Can anyone recommend any comprehensive videos or tutorials for creating a tempo map from the original CD audio track and though probably in a very painstaking way * re render my audio and MIDI tracks to align closer to the original real tempo map? Most of what I've seen are a clips that explain the basic tools - but doesn't show an application like this. I imagine Midi alignment will be much easier to manipulate to the new tempo map - but I have not gone through that either. I'm not looking for perfection - but I'd like to go through the excersize of learning if it can be done and maintain reasonable audio quality. My basic assumptions going into this for the first time. I would select a portion or all of the cd track. Create an FX region to work with in Melodyne for tempo map extraction ? Render it back to CbB to create the new tempo map? Select small portion of my recorded audio tracks and somehow align audio transients to this new tempo map? Am I even close to understanding the basic path to do this? - Edited February 9, 2019 by RBH Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Craig Anderton Posted February 9, 2019 Share Posted February 9, 2019 The best answer depends on whether the song was cut to a click, in which case the process is simple, or not...which is a whole other can of worms. In many (most) cases, CbB can use Melodyne to create a tempo track. It simply involves dragging the source track up to the timeline. You may need to change Melodyne's algorithm, depending on the source track itself. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
RBH Posted February 9, 2019 Author Share Posted February 9, 2019 Thanks Craig - I looked at my original tracks, and If I recall - I probably started this off using an midi file for basic drums and keyboard chords. I've tossed these tracks about for a while - but they do stay relatively aligned to the grid in PRV. So - maybe a good sign ? and- I did drag the CD audio track up the Melodyne and it created a tempo map based on what I assume is it's specific timing. There is continuously changing map - varying roughly 118 to about 124 . I'm assuming this is a decent start. I save off as a copy to junk around with. Of course now all audio tracks are off tempo (as I assumed would happen ). The MIDI tracks however are close enough to work with. This gives me a start - Thanks very much. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Craig Anderton Posted February 10, 2019 Share Posted February 10, 2019 You might find this article helpful. It's how I matched Sonar's tempo to a song in order to do a cover version. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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