Hi All!
So what are people's methods here for getting samples on their tracks (that they've added mid-way through) in time with the track accurately?
I'm just tryna get a vocal acapella in time with the track. I've used pitch correction to get it in key, that worked out well.
Thanks!
EDIT - It'd make life so much easier if they added 'Tempo Detect' of audio and 'Fit to Tempo' like FL Studio in Reason.
Tempo Sync of an Audio Clip
- Creativemind
- Posts: 4875
- Joined: 17 Jan 2015
- Location: Stoke-On-Trent, England, UK
Reason Studio's 11.3 / Cockos Reaper 6.82 / Cakewalk By Bandlab / Orion 8.6
http://soundcloud.com/creativemind75/iv ... soul-mix-3
Tempo detection is pretty unreliable on anything without drums.
Use the "tap" button to figure out a vocals bpm
Use the "tap" button to figure out a vocals bpm
- Exowildebeest
- Posts: 1553
- Joined: 16 Jan 2015
This is an area of Reason that's fairly opaque, in my opinion. The stretching sounds great, but the ways the user interacts with it is... well opaque is my word of choice because I like the word
Any audio you import on the timeline gets 'tagged' with the current tempo you have set in your project and remains unstretched and unaltered, but stretch is enabled and it will stretch if you change the tempo. The exceptions to this are samples that are already tagged with a tempo, done by Reason when exporting, and this only goes for files exported by Reason, as far as I know - in that case they get stretched from that original tagged tempo to the tempo of your project when you import them.
If you have an acapella, one approach is to import it on an audio track, disable stretch on the clip, enable the metronome/play a beat and start adjusting the project tempo until the acapella hits the right beats. Now delete the audio clip and re-import it. It'll now get tagged (the audio clip in the project, not the file itself, you'll have to re-export for that) with the tempo you found and have your project set to, and this'll be its original tempo from where it will stretch, as you return your project to the tempo you had intended for your song. You can fine tune the stretch by dragging the edges of the audio clip by holding Ctrl.
But syncing acapella's of unknown tempo is a much more difficult case than say, drum beats. There's less transients to detect, there's imperfect or artistic timing, sometimes long silences. Whether manual or algorithm in a DAW, there will always be times when it's a struggle (but that's coming from someone with very limited experience in working with syncing acapella's, so what the hell do I know - I'm sure others here have plenty of other, better advice!)
Any audio you import on the timeline gets 'tagged' with the current tempo you have set in your project and remains unstretched and unaltered, but stretch is enabled and it will stretch if you change the tempo. The exceptions to this are samples that are already tagged with a tempo, done by Reason when exporting, and this only goes for files exported by Reason, as far as I know - in that case they get stretched from that original tagged tempo to the tempo of your project when you import them.
If you have an acapella, one approach is to import it on an audio track, disable stretch on the clip, enable the metronome/play a beat and start adjusting the project tempo until the acapella hits the right beats. Now delete the audio clip and re-import it. It'll now get tagged (the audio clip in the project, not the file itself, you'll have to re-export for that) with the tempo you found and have your project set to, and this'll be its original tempo from where it will stretch, as you return your project to the tempo you had intended for your song. You can fine tune the stretch by dragging the edges of the audio clip by holding Ctrl.
But syncing acapella's of unknown tempo is a much more difficult case than say, drum beats. There's less transients to detect, there's imperfect or artistic timing, sometimes long silences. Whether manual or algorithm in a DAW, there will always be times when it's a struggle (but that's coming from someone with very limited experience in working with syncing acapella's, so what the hell do I know - I'm sure others here have plenty of other, better advice!)
- Creativemind
- Posts: 4875
- Joined: 17 Jan 2015
- Location: Stoke-On-Trent, England, UK
Thanks! will give that a go. I get the feeling the audio clip needs multiple chops and syncing each one as some parts are in time some aren't.Exowildebeest wrote: ↑02 Jan 2019This is an area of Reason that's fairly opaque, in my opinion. The stretching sounds great, but the ways the user interacts with it is... well opaque is my word of choice because I like the word
Any audio you import on the timeline gets 'tagged' with the current tempo you have set in your project and remains unstretched and unaltered, but stretch is enabled and it will stretch if you change the tempo. The exceptions to this are samples that are already tagged with a tempo, done by Reason when exporting, and this only goes for files exported by Reason, as far as I know - in that case they get stretched from that original tagged tempo to the tempo of your project when you import them.
If you have an acapella, one approach is to import it on an audio track, disable stretch on the clip, enable the metronome/play a beat and start adjusting the project tempo until the acapella hits the right beats. Now delete the audio clip and re-import it. It'll now get tagged (the audio clip in the project, not the file itself, you'll have to re-export for that) with the tempo you found and have your project set to, and this'll be its original tempo from where it will stretch, as you return your project to the tempo you had intended for your song. You can fine tune the stretch by dragging the edges of the audio clip by holding Ctrl.
But syncing acapella's of unknown tempo is a much more difficult case than say, drum beats. There's less transients to detect, there's imperfect or artistic timing, sometimes long silences. Whether manual or algorithm in a DAW, there will always be times when it's a struggle (but that's coming from someone with very limited experience in working with syncing acapella's, so what the hell do I know - I'm sure others here have plenty of other, better advice!)
As for the other poster, fit to tempo in FL Studio doesn't work every time but in a large proportion of cases it does.
Reason Studio's 11.3 / Cockos Reaper 6.82 / Cakewalk By Bandlab / Orion 8.6
http://soundcloud.com/creativemind75/iv ... soul-mix-3
Can I hear it?Creativemind wrote: ↑02 Jan 2019Thanks! will give that a go. I get the feeling the audio clip needs multiple chops and syncing each one as some parts are in time some aren't.Exowildebeest wrote: ↑02 Jan 2019This is an area of Reason that's fairly opaque, in my opinion. The stretching sounds great, but the ways the user interacts with it is... well opaque is my word of choice because I like the word
Any audio you import on the timeline gets 'tagged' with the current tempo you have set in your project and remains unstretched and unaltered, but stretch is enabled and it will stretch if you change the tempo. The exceptions to this are samples that are already tagged with a tempo, done by Reason when exporting, and this only goes for files exported by Reason, as far as I know - in that case they get stretched from that original tagged tempo to the tempo of your project when you import them.
If you have an acapella, one approach is to import it on an audio track, disable stretch on the clip, enable the metronome/play a beat and start adjusting the project tempo until the acapella hits the right beats. Now delete the audio clip and re-import it. It'll now get tagged (the audio clip in the project, not the file itself, you'll have to re-export for that) with the tempo you found and have your project set to, and this'll be its original tempo from where it will stretch, as you return your project to the tempo you had intended for your song. You can fine tune the stretch by dragging the edges of the audio clip by holding Ctrl.
But syncing acapella's of unknown tempo is a much more difficult case than say, drum beats. There's less transients to detect, there's imperfect or artistic timing, sometimes long silences. Whether manual or algorithm in a DAW, there will always be times when it's a struggle (but that's coming from someone with very limited experience in working with syncing acapella's, so what the hell do I know - I'm sure others here have plenty of other, better advice!)
As for the other poster, fit to tempo in FL Studio doesn't work every time but in a large proportion of cases it does.
- Creativemind
- Posts: 4875
- Joined: 17 Jan 2015
- Location: Stoke-On-Trent, England, UK
You want my acapella? or to hear what FL Studio has done to it?aeox wrote: ↑02 Jan 2019Can I hear it?Creativemind wrote: ↑02 Jan 2019
Thanks! will give that a go. I get the feeling the audio clip needs multiple chops and syncing each one as some parts are in time some aren't.
As for the other poster, fit to tempo in FL Studio doesn't work every time but in a large proportion of cases it does.
If anyone fancies trying to get the acapella in time at 125bpm for me if I send it them I'd be grateful.
Last edited by Creativemind on 02 Jan 2019, edited 1 time in total.
Reason Studio's 11.3 / Cockos Reaper 6.82 / Cakewalk By Bandlab / Orion 8.6
http://soundcloud.com/creativemind75/iv ... soul-mix-3
Just the acapella
- Creativemind
- Posts: 4875
- Joined: 17 Jan 2015
- Location: Stoke-On-Trent, England, UK
You want me send it to you?
If so, PM me your dropbox please.
Reason Studio's 11.3 / Cockos Reaper 6.82 / Cakewalk By Bandlab / Orion 8.6
http://soundcloud.com/creativemind75/iv ... soul-mix-3
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