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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

  • edited April 2024

    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.

  • @SevenSystems said:
    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.

    Any future plans to make Xequence v2 AUv3?

  • @HolyMoses said:

    @SevenSystems said:
    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.

    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.

  • The user and all related content has been deleted.
  • edited May 2024

    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.

  • edited May 2024

    @thomas1977 said:
    Blimey!
    The official xequence 2 page got me expecting a hefty industrial price, but one could surely call that part lightweight.

    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...

    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?

    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!

  • edited May 2024

    @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!

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