Tempo and meter again.

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nick_m 2016-05-31 06:06:11 +10:00
parent 6f692df547
commit 15a2fab08f

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@ -56,7 +56,7 @@ The new tempo will be the same as the tempo at the position of the mouse click (
<p>To copy a tempo, hold down the primary modifier and drag the tempo you wish to copy.</p>
<br>
METER
<h3>Meter</h3>
<br>
<br>
<p>Meter positions beats using the musical pulse of a tempo, and groups them into bars using its number of divisions per bar.
@ -82,10 +82,10 @@ If you need another bar, lock the meter to music again (right click->"Lock to Mu
<li>To copy a meter, hold down control and drag it.</li>
<br>
Techniques
<h3>Techniques </h3>
<br>
As a general approach, the best way to control tempo ramps is to use them in pairs (disregarding the first one).
<p>As a general approach, the best way to control tempo ramps is to use them in pairs (disregarding the first one).
</p>
<p>Lets imagine we want to match PROGRAM_NAMEs click to a drum performance recorded in 'free time'.
The first thing we need to do is determine where the first beat is. Drag the first meter to that position.
</p>
@ -141,7 +141,7 @@ you dragged the BBT ruler, making the second tempo provide enough pulses over th
<p>If your ramp doesn't feel correct, you may add more points within it and keep adjusting beat positions in a similar manner.
</p>
<br>
General note:
<h3>General</h3>
<p>Audio locked meters can be useful when composing, as they allow a continuous piece of music to be worked on in
isolated segments, preventing the listening fatigue of a fixed form.