I would also like to know about this. What if you do not know the original tempo of that AIFF file? How can you match the metronome/click to match it? I do this in Cubase by trial and error; I sync the start and then adjust the tempo until the middle and finally the end matches. In Logic, the AIFF file stretches and expands with my tempo changes; how do I avoid this? SL --- In Logic_Cafe@yahoogroups.com, charlie eisenhardt <c_eisenhardt@...> wrote: > > The two things I would want to varify are, what sample > rate was the session recorded in (In DP) and what is > your Logic project sample rate that you are in now. > > "they were in sync at the beginning of the recording > and then delayed by many beats later on in the 6min+ > song." > > Was the BPM in DP exactly the same number (ie; 127.68 > BPM) as it is in Logic? If Logic was at say, 127.25 > BPM, I could see a drift happening over time. > I agree with what someone else here wrote, confirm > that was no strange tempo ramp or shift in either > program... > > Hope this helps! > > > > > > >>>So, the guy who recorded the tracks in Dig. Perf. > said that he changed the sample rate to same some > memory. I assume that means that he changed it from > 44.1 to something else. What does he have to do to fix > things? Re-record at 44.1? And-- are you saying that > changing that, and that alone, will probably fix my > sync problem? You mentioned that it might make the > congas sound different but it didn't; they were in > sync at the beginning of the recording and then > delayed by many beats later on in the 6min+ song. > > > -- charlie eisenhardt : senior creative editor : > > > > > ____________________________________________________________________________________ > Sponsored Link > > Online degrees - find the right program to advance your career. > Www.nextag.com >
Message
Re: importing audio files
2007-03-01 by Scotsman
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