I'm sure James Bowden who is far cleverer than I could tell you how to do
this in exacting measurements, but yes there is. I don't know the exact
science of it, but apply to all tracks, and use the tools >time expand tool
to shrink/expand the track by the amount required to make it line up.
Very very useful tool, I use it all the time, but usually only to double
the selection of something, or to put it into half-time.
Hope you can work it out using trial and error. If you do, I'd be
interested to know what values you used. Thanks, and hope that helps
somewhat.
From: Leonard de Ruijter <[email protected]>
on Friday, December 30, 2011 9:44 AM
Hello,
Let's give you an example of where my question is about, as that
explains much. Let say i have recorded a midi in an old crappy program
without a metronome. I had to use an external metronome, and i don't
know the exact tempo of that metronome. De midi tempo of the midi itself
is 120. Playing the midi in qws when the metronome is enabled really
fails, and thus also quantizing fails badly. Is there a way to sync the
midi tempo of the file with the actual tempo the music is played in,
without changing its real tempo? I.e. when the tempo of the music is 150
and the midi tempo is 120, is there a way to change the midi tempo to
150 without the real, actually sounding tempo being adjusted?
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