

That might get you close enough for your purposes. This'll probably be messy and a lot of work before it's all over.Īlso, look at process/fit-to-time.

Then you have to get the MIDI notes in the original quantized. but only after getting a click track from the original that has exactly one note on per beat. If it is critical to map this to a MIDI file that has valid note-on placement with respect to measures and beats, you could do process/fit-to-improve. In other words, you're saying he recorded it with some arbitrary tempo setting but made no attempt to line up his performance with the internal measure/beat postitions? If so, then why do you even care? Just do your thing with the existing MIDI events as they lay. I'm stumped on how to fix this because I've never been faced with this before. Do you have any ideas for me as to how I can get the right tempo so I can quantize this and fix it to time the right way? I've tried importing just the midi aspect of the file with a starting point on my end of 116, but that still made it too fast. If I change it to 116, of course it really speeds up way too fast. He has it at 98.50, yet when I tap using the metronome, it comes out to about 116 bpm. The file he sent was recorded in real time without adjusting his tempo to the correct time in the Sonar work file. I have a client that sent me a midi drum file of him playing on a Roland V Drums kit that he wants me to run through one of my modules to cop better sounds.

I feel embarrassed to even ask this question on here, but I've never been faced with this before and was hoping you might be able to help me out please? Changing tempo of a midi recorded at the wrong tempo?
