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Timestretch midiclip
Hi Folks,
Consider this recorded slice of midi with a length of 2.4.1 bars.
I’d like to time-stretch the clip (not the individual note lengths) to measure up to 2.4.4 bars.
Is this possible in Atom 2?
If not in Atom 2, is there some lightweight midi-tool that can do this?
It looks like I could re-record at the correct pace, but the source of the midi is dependent on the same clock as Atom 2, so the relative size from the midi-clip will always remain shorter then 2.4.4 bars in Atom.
I regularly run into this, so any hint, even to a lengthy workaround, will be much appreciated!
Thanks!
Comments
Xequence 2 has very flexible MIDI time-stretching, however I wouldn't call it "lightweight" in terms of features. It is lightweight in terms of download size though 😄
It can import MIDI files into the arranger / pianoroll, where you could then time-stretch them to your heart's content, and then export a MIDI file again.
Have you used the TEMPO setting in Atom to half double or otherwise stretch or shorten the speed of your clip?
AND @SevenSystems Xequence can do what you want with aplomb. Plus a whole lot more.
Any future plans to make Xequence v2 AUv3?
No!
Best midi stretching is in flstudio, but using it for that wouldn’t be very practical.
Blimey!
The official xequence 2 page got me expecting a hefty industrial price, but one could surely call that part lightweight. Don’t know if I’ll ever use it to its full potential, but the timestetching feature is exactly what I need, so kudos for thät hint. A propos, @SevenSystems, what makes midistretching such a hard to find feature? In other endavours, I’m used to command-dragging all over the place to stretch any array relatively.
Thanks @audiblevideo for the hint. But in my experience, its time-increment of 0.05 often does not provide enough precision to match the timing. And when it does, it’s still hard to match tempi this way for the long run. Still a solution that might apply to other cases so it should indeed be listed here too.
Haha, thanks a lot, sounds like a compliment 😄 I did try with an industrial price (which I actually think would be more appropriate indeed), however it seems like most customers didn't have industrial wallets, especially in the past 4 years of constant simultaneous 5 crises...
I think it's (probably) mostly not about implementation difficulty, but maybe it's not that musically useful in most cases? I'm not sure. I don't use it a lot myself, but happy to see there's a niche for it!
@SevenSystems
It sure was intended as a compliment. You get a lot for that price.
Most of the time I end up with a lot of different and often awkwardly decimal barcounts. Being able to stack those calibrated to a common beat saves me lots of time. Money well spent!