toodamnhip wrote:I think adjust beats to be really cool too, but I have a question?
Sometimes, it is tooo good...
I have had time where I really really match my click and barlines to an erratic guitar player for example....spend a lot of time on it ya know....
and thenn, the drums sound crazy jumping to the guys playing...
And I find that Tap tempo, in a manner which kind of taps around the EXACT timing is better and less jerky in tempo.
Have you everfound that Shoosh? That it is bettter to not quite follow a guys performance too perfectly?...
It's an art. I don't mean that flippantly, as if to one-up you or anything, but if someone is playing in a groove, then the beat may not be in the melody. Things get pretty syncopated, and placing the beats gets pretty difficult at times, which is why I prefer manual to automatic any day. So, having gotten your attention, let me explain a little trick I use. It's SOO much easier in Consolidated Windows, so be sure to do it there. First, remove your sidebars from the CW, so that you just have the big middle portion. Stretch the MIDI Edit Window across the screen. Just below it, position the Conductor Track (note: DP has issues with the conductor track in consolidated windows, but that's for another thread. You won't be able to successfully save and retrieve this as a window set) Now, use your favorite zooming method to exactly match the zooming of the two windows: MIDI Edit and Conductor Track, so that they are perfectly lined up and exactly the same length. I use the Option-drag method, dragging over exactly the same number of bars. (Note: if you're doing this with audio, use the Sequence Editor the same way.)
Now, with Adjust Beats dialog open and set to your preferred method of work, begin dragging the barlines. I often do the first few with "set all following measures the same" (or whatever it says), then switch to independent beats until it starts getting out of hand, then repeat. Ok, now when you get to questionable spots, where you're not sure of where to place the beat, start watching the conductor track. If you place the beat too far one way or the other, you'll see the tempo markers jump in opposition to each other on either side of your beat. That means you just made a sudden jump in tempo. If the music did not jump in tempo, then that means you placed the beat in the wrong location. Move it until the tempo markers level out, and you've got it right. While I work with snapping turned on, I use the Command Key a lot to temporarily toggle it off in cases like the above.
There's my million dollar trick. One of them, anyway!
Shooshie