![]() ![]() wav files playing too slow is most likely a mismatch in sample rate. wav audio tracks, your midi piano track does play at the correct tempo in ProTools at 84 BPM?Īs Jim suggested, the issue with the. It's only irrelevant if the project is audio-only with no click. When using midi instruments, or even just a click track, the midi tempo is an important component of the project, particularly if you're collaborating with others remotely. If you are combining both audio and midi tracks in your DAW as you describe, you definitely DO need and want the midi tempo to be set the same in both programs. 84 BPM means the same thing to any of them. Modern DAWs like ProTools, Reaper, Sonar, Studio One, etc., as well as BIAB are midi sequencers. Jobless- but not homeless- now retired 7 years If you decide to travel this road, be sure to SAVE AS your initial session with a different name so you can revert back to it should you need to.Įmmons L-II, Fender Telecasters, B-Benders #CONVERT BIAB TO IREAL PRO PRO#Oh and this, Pro Tools actually has the ability to modify the BPM of an imported file from a previous program or a singular track in a session, but it may not be a road you want to travel, its an an advanced edit tool, called elastic audio, You can stretch or shrink an entire track or perhaps just a portion of a track. Many DAWS, Pro Tools included, just happen to use the 120 Number as the Default BPM ref number. We load the files into the DAW in their entirety, - do some recording - send the file back. When doing E Sessions, across the net, sending files back and fourth, nobody changes or cares what the BPM is, we never change the time stamp or the BPM envelope of the original file. IF you change the default DAW BPM, NOW it cares. Pro Tools or ANY Daw will just play back the WAV file at whatever BPM is saved in the WAV envelope. The Pro Tools default of 120 is now actually 84 BPM in the real world. In your specific case, you saved the imported BIAB files at 84 BPM. All other tracks will remain where they were ! Pro Tools or any other DAW has no clue what it is, YOU DO.Īlso as a reminder, in Pro Tools or any DAW, be sure to globally select ALL tracks to change with the DAW meter change, otherwise only the selected track will change with the BPM change. ![]() BIAB saves the BPM in the WAV file envelope. You have two numbers going on, from two different platforms. When in Pro Tools, drop the BPM to whatever you want, now its a real reference. IF you are really wanting the DAW, any DAW, to control the BPM, using the DAW default BPM number, before you convert your BIAB files to wave, run the BPM meter up to 120, save the BIAB files at 120. IF your imported file started life at 100 BPM, and you SAVED IT, then you drop the DAW default from 120 to 100, you just dropped the entire imported file 20 BPM, yep it drags. IF you created the track in the DAW then of course the default BPM would be 120, real time, but you didn't.,the DAW doesn't know where the music file came from, YOU DO. Think of it this way, Your file is 100 BPM, The Daw default number is 120, 120 is now actually 100 because YOU already set it and imported it ahead of the DAW. Its just a number, The IMPORTED FILE is the BPM. When transfering to Pro Tools, or ANY DAW, whatever the default BPM is for the DAW is now the merged file BPM. ![]() So if you save a file in BIAB as 100 bpm, or whatever, THAT is the meter. Do NOT change it in Pro Tools, Pro Tools default is 120, its just a REF NUMBER when moving files into Pro Tools. Whatever meter you save the BIAB WAV files to is the STOCK meter, in ANY DAW. ![]()
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