Kurre Posted July 5, 2019 Share Posted July 5, 2019 Can track 2 have a different tempo than track 3 in the same project? Can track 2 be 120 bpm and track 3 be 60 bpm in the same project? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
0 mdiemer Posted July 5, 2019 Share Posted July 5, 2019 I don't see how that is possible. But the solution is to make the notes in track 1 half the value of the notes in track two. For example, track one is eighth notes, track two is quarter notes. Quarter notes are twice as long as eighth notes. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
0 abacab Posted July 5, 2019 Share Posted July 5, 2019 I agree that tempo is a project based attribute. But @mdiemermade a good suggestion, since they two proposed track tempos are evenly divisible. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
0 Blogospherianman Posted July 5, 2019 Share Posted July 5, 2019 You can always change the projects tempo temporarily to work on a track of another tempo then bounce or freeze the audio prior to reverting your tempo back. If you have midi going you might bounce to audio prior to changing tempo just for the sake of hearing the same thing while you’ve altered your tempo. (Monitoring your project at the 120 tempo while recording your 60 bpm track) . After recording the 60 bpm stuff, freeze or bounce to lock it in at 60 as audio, then change your tempo back, delete the reference bounce (for monitoring at 60) and move on to whatever is next. I always Save As Project - original tempo map then as Project - New tempo or whatever just to be safe. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
0 Kurre Posted July 6, 2019 Author Share Posted July 6, 2019 (edited) Thanks. All of you. Maybe that note value thing can partially work. Hadn't thought of that. It seems i quite often land in these situations. I get an idea and find it difficult to realize it. In this case it would have been two vst's operating separately/independently but starting at the same time when synced to the host timeline. Could be new and interesting sounds/rhytms from that. ( I must try harder to conform.)? Edited July 6, 2019 by Kurre Addition. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
0 abacab Posted July 6, 2019 Share Posted July 6, 2019 11 hours ago, Kurre said: In this case it would have been two vst's operating separately/independently but starting at the same time when synced to the host timeline. Could be new and interesting sounds/rhytms from that. If there are two vsts operating independently of the host project tempo, you could get some drift away from the beat, even if they are started at the same time. If you sync them to the host tempo, they should both run at the same tempo. Who knows? Could be an interesting experiment! In theory, 60bpm and 120bpm should have their beats lined up, with one just playing twice as fast. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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Kurre
Can track 2 have a different tempo than track 3 in the same project?
Can track 2 be 120 bpm and track 3 be 60 bpm in the same project?
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