Andres Medina Posted Thursday at 01:51 PM Share Posted Thursday at 01:51 PM Hi, I saw a cool feature in Logic that allows you to record a midi performance and then extract the tempo from it. I know Sonar does not have that, but I recall that you can extract tempo from an audio recording, and it involves Melodyne. Anyone can point me to some guidance on how to use that feature? Thanks! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
HOOK Posted Thursday at 02:09 PM Share Posted Thursday at 02:09 PM Page 419 of the CbB Reference Guide covers this. https://bandlab.github.io/cakewalk/docs/Cakewalk Reference Guide.pdf Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Andres Medina Posted Thursday at 02:27 PM Author Share Posted Thursday at 02:27 PM 18 minutes ago, HOOK said: Page 419 of the CbB Reference Guide covers this. https://bandlab.github.io/cakewalk/docs/Cakewalk Reference Guide.pdf Thanks! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Wookiee Posted Thursday at 02:28 PM Share Posted Thursday at 02:28 PM 37 minutes ago, Andres Medina said: Hi, I saw a cool feature in Logic that allows you to record a midi performance and then extract the tempo from it. I know Sonar does not have that, but I recall that you can extract tempo from an audio recording, and it involves Melodyne. Anyone can point me to some guidance on how to use that feature? Thanks! MIDI is controlled by the MIDI clock, as pitch is not dictated by MIDI tempo. Sonar can extract tempo from Audio, just drag the Audio clip to the time rule and it will create a tempo map. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Andres Medina Posted Thursday at 04:20 PM Author Share Posted Thursday at 04:20 PM 1 hour ago, Wookiee said: MIDI is controlled by the MIDI clock, as pitch is not dictated by MIDI tempo. Sonar can extract tempo from Audio, just drag the Audio clip to the time rule and it will create a tempo map. Thanks! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
David Baay Posted Thursday at 05:20 PM Share Posted Thursday at 05:20 PM I prefer to get the tempo from the MIDI directly, using Set Measure/Beat At Now. Takes a little more work, but is more precise and flexible, and less prone to error. Melodyne interpolates tempo changes on every 8th note that are often superfluous and actually make the timing drift in and out of sync with the original performance. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Andres Medina Posted Thursday at 05:42 PM Author Share Posted Thursday at 05:42 PM 20 minutes ago, David Baay said: I prefer to get the tempo from the MIDI directly, using Set Measure/Beat At Now. Takes a little more work, but is more precise and flexible, and less prone to error. Melodyne interpolates tempo changes on every 8th note that are often superfluous and actually make the timing drift in and out of sync with the original performance. Thanks... how do you get the tempo from the midi clip? - not familiar with that Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
David Baay Posted Thursday at 07:49 PM Share Posted Thursday at 07:49 PM 2 hours ago, Andres Medina said: how do you get the tempo from the midi clip? Here's a pretty detailed version of the process I posted previously. It's easier to do then to describe. Once you get in a flow with the keyboard shortcuts, it can go pretty quickly, depnding on how variable the timing is: Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Andres Medina Posted Friday at 03:04 AM Author Share Posted Friday at 03:04 AM 7 hours ago, David Baay said: Here's a pretty detailed version of the process I posted previously. It's easier to do then to describe. Once you get in a flow with the keyboard shortcuts, it can go pretty quickly, depnding on how variable the timing is: Thanks! I'll dive in - Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
David Baay Posted Friday at 09:04 AM Share Posted Friday at 09:04 AM I should mention another option that can be quite fast for some MIDI recordings is to pull one note for each quarter-note beat from the recording into another track (or deleting notes from a copy of it) to create a Guide Track for the Fit Improvisation function. But Fit Improvisation requires a note on every beat and if the recording is missing notes on a lot of beats, it can be difficult to build a complete guide track. Some advocate recording a guide track in real time by playing a note on every beat from your keyboard in time with the performance, but that will inevitably lead to some rushing/dragging that may not be tolerable. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Bass Guitar Posted Friday at 05:03 PM Share Posted Friday at 05:03 PM Freeze midi track/ Drag to timeline/ Unfreeze midi track. Open the tempo track and Inspector view of it. Now turn on ripple edit/ turn off snap to grid. Drag midi track until downbeat lines up to measure grid properly. Now check that every downbeat is lining up properly. You might have to edit the the tempo track. You can also use Set Measure Beat at now to edit anything that was wrong. But for me this has always worked for most of material. The stronger the transients the better the success. You can also do this in Melodyne stand alone or from within Sonar and export a tempo map. But it needs to be audio first. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
David Baay Posted Friday at 07:06 PM Share Posted Friday at 07:06 PM Here's a post from earlier this year with two simple projects attached the I created to demonstrate the superiority of SM/BAN to Melodyne: Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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