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Laurence Payne
 
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On Wed, 10 Aug 2005 22:55:28 GMT, "Doc"
wrote:

I'm doing a transcription of an old big band recording using Cakewalk Pro
Audio 8. My plan is to have the wave file at the top and then piece together
the band below it, following along with the recording. I want to make the
wave file fit fairly precisely into the measures so I don't have to futz
with the midi tracks later to make them line up. Tape decks being what they
are and the original performance being done by humans, after a while it
drifts off from the metronome beat.

A way I've come up with is to find a tempo that fits for as long as
possible, paste in the wave file and about a bar before it starts to drift
noticeably, split the file, cut the portion of the file from that point on,
insert a tempo change that fits - probably only a click or so one way or the
other is all that's needed - repaste, and continue this process to the end
of the recording.

Is there a more elegant way of doing it than this? My source for the
recording is an analog tape deck.


The better MIDI/audio sequencers have a tempo map function. But
question whether you NEED a tempo map. Jazz rhythms, above all, are
better played than step-entered. Can't you play the parts in?
Ignore bars and beats.

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