![]() This will preserve the absolute positioning of all your midi events - crucially, this position includes all tempo automation you've made before switching the time-base, but will not be further affected by any tempo/grid changes made after switching. Switch all your midi tracks to linear time. Try this, after saving a backup of course: Can I align the grid now in a way that does not change the tempo map? The grid is all over the place because of this. It's because I played them in without click, and then adjusted the tempo via the tempo map before aligning them. I'll try with a picture:Īs you can see there is a tempo map that is active and influencing the tempo of the track. I apologize, I am horrible at explaining this. What I need is a way to adjust the grid without making any changes to the tempo map that already exists. If I use Time Warp it changes my tempo map that I already created. This way, I created a detailed tempo map for a track that is not aligned to the grid. Where I wanted my track to be faster than I actually played it, I set a higher bpm in the tempo track etc. To this unaligned track I then made tempo changes using the tempo track. The bar lines in Cubase are all over the place, and not aligned to the actual performance. ![]() ![]() ![]() After that, stupidly I did not align the grid to the performance. This is what I have: I played in a midi track in free tempo without click. Problem is that this way I loose the tempo map that I have created.
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