the best thing about this video Apart from its awesome content is the welcome lack of procrastination at the beginning so often these days you tubers go on and on and on for three or four mins then the content is then very short or not worth waiting for.. this is why i love this clip so much.. oh and by the way .. just reiterate just Awesome the way you explain this... i have struggled for a long time with this but since your first video i got this stuff down now and boom we have a follow up .. thank you so much T
Absolutely what I needed to get my head around, episodes 26/27 and I can now start to map some really complex musical theatre numbers. Thanks for a very concise explanation.
Basically, [Free warp] allows you to squeeze or stretch your audio to fit a grid. [Time warp] allows you to squeeze or stretch your grid to fit against [Linear based] events like markers (in Linear mode).
So helpful, can't thank you enough. I've been lookin all over for a tutorial on detecting fluctuating tempos, this is the only one that finally helped! Thank you :)
I've watched & liked your 27 videos during the past 3 weeks. I love the idea of the quick (be detailled) tour. Your're really good at it !! I'm going to talk about your channel, it's a pity to get only 50 likes with such a good material. Keep rocking.
Thanks, as a new cubase user, you have explained clearly this invaluable tool for cleaning up wave files sent to me where tempo drifts. Really appreciate this tutorial.
You speak with so much clarity and understanding it is the biggest relief as a viewer and I feel much more confident about working in cubase as a result!! Thank you very much for this gift! :)
tnks Steve!, Im in cubase since its weight was "1 Megabyte" jaja...and a few years ago I tried to square an audio to the tempo track and it was impossible for me, so, I learned to use Ableton Live ony for that propose. I can finally have it all in one DAW!
Awesome, detailed tutorial man! Thank you! May I ask for a request to make a short video on how to quickly work with loop samlpes? I'm a beginner in cubase 11 (coming from fl studio lol) but I'm having difficulties to quickly stretch the loops in the timeline to match the project tempo.
Excellent video! A question though: What happens to the ritard at the end of the piece once you go through all this? Is it lost and the piece just stays at the same tempo till the end or will Cubase still follow it? Or do you have to "end" the tempo map right before that last bar so it doesn't alter the slow down? Additionally, if you tossed that drum loop in there all the way to the end, would it slow down too or remain the same tempo? Always wondered how to deal with that.
When you use the 'set definition from tempo" feature in the Audio/Advanced tab, Cubase is using all of that tempo marker info that you created to 'conform' your audio to a new tempo....including any retards or other tempo fluctuations, so yes, you loose it. As of yet, Cubase donate have the ability to 'apply tempo conformation' to only a specific range in the project. that would be very cool indeed, hopefully in a future update.
I guess you can put the last warp marker at the last bar BUT with an offset, so that the slow down will be "taken into account" (in a sense) in the tempo map... Not 100% sure about this, but would possibly work for the actual track, but maybe not for the added drum or instruments?... mochs3869, have you found a way to cope with and keep this intended slow-down??!
Excellent tutorial.
Thanks. I appreciate that!
the best thing about this video Apart from its awesome content is the welcome lack of procrastination at the beginning so often these days you tubers go on and on and on for three or four mins then the content is then very short or not worth waiting for..
this is why i love this clip so much..
oh and by the way .. just reiterate just Awesome the way you explain this... i have struggled for a long time with this but since your first video i got this stuff down now and boom we have a follow up ..
thank you so much
T
Thanks Tony, a lot goes into these and I appreciate that.
MY FRIEND, YOU ARE ONE OF THE BEST TEACHER OUT THERE !! KEEP UP THE GOOD WORK, MAY GOD BLESS YOU ABUNDANTLY !!!
Thanks, I appreciate that.
Salute to you... Love the clarity of the explanations for these tutorials... Much thanks
Hey! Thank you! The best video about this feature I've watched so far!
Thanx....great clear and concise videos.
You are welcome!
Wow, just amazing tutorial. Brilliant!
This video really cleared up all confusion around time warping. Thank you!
Thanks Lucas, Glad it was helpful!
Absolutely what I needed to get my head around, episodes 26/27 and I can now start to map some really complex musical theatre numbers. Thanks for a very concise explanation.
Thanks Tim, Glad this was helpful!
Incredible! So clearly explained. Thanks so much.
These are AMAZINGLY helpful videos. Thank you.
Basically,
[Free warp] allows you to squeeze or stretch your audio to fit a grid.
[Time warp] allows you to squeeze or stretch your grid to fit against [Linear based] events like markers (in Linear mode).
Vraiment merci. Avec impatience on attend la suite :-)
Je travaille sur plus de tutoriels entre nos clients de studio d'enregistrement. J'apprécie vraiment que tu regardes le cours
So helpful, can't thank you enough. I've been lookin all over for a tutorial on detecting fluctuating tempos, this is the only one that finally helped! Thank you :)
Just found your channel and it's been brilliant, subscribed and now I've got a lot of catching up to do. Thanks.
Awesome, thank you for checking out the channel.
Another excellent and well done tutorial! Your presentation and the information is top notch! Thank you!
I've watched & liked your 27 videos during the past 3 weeks. I love the idea of the quick (be detailled) tour.
Your're really good at it !!
I'm going to talk about your channel, it's a pity to get only 50 likes with such a good material.
Keep rocking.
Thank you, I really appreciate that!
Thanks, as a new cubase user, you have explained clearly this invaluable tool for cleaning up wave files sent to me where tempo drifts. Really appreciate this tutorial.
You speak with so much clarity and understanding it is the biggest relief as a viewer and I feel much more confident about working in cubase as a result!! Thank you very much for this gift! :)
Thank You Jillian, appreciate that!
Thanks great vid !
#26 and 27 were super helpful and really well communicated. Thank you so much. Just bought Cubase for the first time so this helps a lot
Very nice tutorial
Many many thanks
Perfect Tutorial! Thanks a lot!
Excellent video very helpful 🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸😊😊👌👍
tnks Steve!, Im in cubase since its weight was "1 Megabyte" jaja...and a few years ago I tried to square an audio to the tempo track and it was impossible for me, so, I learned to use Ableton Live ony for that propose. I can finally have it all in one DAW!
Great video. I now understand this really well. Many thanks :-)
Awesome, detailed tutorial man! Thank you!
May I ask for a request to make a short video on how to quickly work with loop samlpes? I'm a beginner in cubase 11 (coming from fl studio lol) but I'm having difficulties to quickly stretch the loops in the timeline to match the project tempo.
Great Idea!
Excellent video! A question though: What happens to the ritard at the end of the piece once you go through all this? Is it lost and the piece just stays at the same tempo till the end or will Cubase still follow it? Or do you have to "end" the tempo map right before that last bar so it doesn't alter the slow down? Additionally, if you tossed that drum loop in there all the way to the end, would it slow down too or remain the same tempo? Always wondered how to deal with that.
When you use the 'set definition from tempo" feature in the Audio/Advanced tab, Cubase is using all of that tempo marker info that you created to 'conform' your audio to a new tempo....including any retards or other tempo fluctuations, so yes, you loose it. As of yet, Cubase donate have the ability to 'apply tempo conformation' to only a specific range in the project. that would be very cool indeed, hopefully in a future update.
I guess you can put the last warp marker at the last bar BUT with an offset, so that the slow down will be "taken into account" (in a sense) in the tempo map... Not 100% sure about this, but would possibly work for the actual track, but maybe not for the added drum or instruments?... mochs3869, have you found a way to cope with and keep this intended slow-down??!
@Steven-do2dp No, but it wasn't something I was actually working on, just curious about when watching the video