From 077342de5390b29613394509472b294f6ee4a28b Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001
From: nick_m
Notice what is happeneing here: the tempo previous to your mouse pointer is being changed so that the beat you grabbed aligns with the pointer. -Notice that the tempo lines previous to the changed one also move. This is because the previous tempo is ramping *to* the tempo you are changing. +Notice that the tempo lines previous to the changed one also move. This is because the previous tempo is ramping to the tempo you are changing. Look further to the left. The tempo lines in the first four bars do not move.
Again, some time later the click will not align. I didn't say this was easy.
-Repeat the same technique : add two new tempos and drag the BBT ruler *after* the newest tempo so that the beats align with the audio again. +
Repeat the same technique : add two new tempos and drag the BBT ruler after the newest tempo so that the beats align with the audio again.
In a general sense, adding tempo markers in pairs allows you to 'pin' your previous work while you move further to the right. @@ -128,7 +128,7 @@ would be good for this, but you want an accelerando to that point.
Add a tempo ar bar 4.
-Holding down the constraint modifier, and with snap set to 'TC Frames', grab the BBT ruler just *after* 4|1|0. +
Holding down the constraint modifier, and with snap set to 'TC Frames', grab the BBT ruler just after 4|1|0. Drag the ruler so that 4|1|0 snaps to the 'phone' frame.
Notice what happened : The second tempo was changed.