Generating metronome track
-
- KVRist
- 158 posts since 12 Jan, 2004
Hello all,
I have a simple question for which I can't find an easy solution.
Let me say I have 2 tracks in a midi file.
Now I want to create a 3th track and automatically generate metronome midi clicks in it. It should follow all tempo changes and meter changes.
Which host can do this automatically.
I have to create many mentronome tracks.
Anybody?
Thank you,
Joenco
I have a simple question for which I can't find an easy solution.
Let me say I have 2 tracks in a midi file.
Now I want to create a 3th track and automatically generate metronome midi clicks in it. It should follow all tempo changes and meter changes.
Which host can do this automatically.
I have to create many mentronome tracks.
Anybody?
Thank you,
Joenco
-
- KVRist
- 113 posts since 30 Oct, 2004
I would guess any host which can output a midi metronome during playback (e.g. Sonar) can do this if you use a MIDI router, like Midi Yoke, to route the metronome channel back into the host, and record it on an empty track. Haven't tried it myself, though...
(http://www.midiox.com/)
This method would require playing each song in real time, not good if you have hundreds to do...
(http://www.midiox.com/)
This method would require playing each song in real time, not good if you have hundreds to do...
-
- KVRist
- Topic Starter
- 158 posts since 12 Jan, 2004
Hello,
Thanks for the fast reply
I have thought about this myself but I would like to find another way. Recording it will take as much time as the song is. I would also have to record it again after every simple edit. There should be a faster way.
Thank you again,
Joenco
Thanks for the fast reply
I have thought about this myself but I would like to find another way. Recording it will take as much time as the song is. I would also have to record it again after every simple edit. There should be a faster way.
Thank you again,
Joenco
-
- KVRAF
- 6937 posts since 4 Jun, 2004 from Utrecht, Holland
Learn this lesson now: always first make a metronome or click-track if your host does not feature a metronome.
On existing material recorded without anything really steady for guidance it is difficult to generate it later.
On existing material recorded without anything really steady for guidance it is difficult to generate it later.
-
- KVRist
- Topic Starter
- 158 posts since 12 Jan, 2004
Yes I can indeed input it but I'm looking for something to generate a metronome track automatic. Doing it by hand is to time consuming for the purpose I have.
We record midifiles and I would like to hand out the files immediately without my colleagues and students having to wait until I can input a simple midi clicktrack.
There should be a faster way doing this.
We record midifiles and I would like to hand out the files immediately without my colleagues and students having to wait until I can input a simple midi clicktrack.
There should be a faster way doing this.
-
- KVRist
- Topic Starter
- 158 posts since 12 Jan, 2004
COOkie,
Do you know freebies aimed at children from 9 till 99.
The freebie should allow tempo and meter changes.
It should also allow speeding up and slowing down.
We now use vanBasco's Karaoke Player
Thank you,
Do you know freebies aimed at children from 9 till 99.
The freebie should allow tempo and meter changes.
It should also allow speeding up and slowing down.
We now use vanBasco's Karaoke Player
Thank you,
-
- KVRAF
- 6937 posts since 4 Jun, 2004 from Utrecht, Holland
Tracktion?? Hmmm, haven't actually seen a metronome in that one... Maybe one of the ancient ones, the freebee type that came shipped with the SoundBlaster cards in 1998 that still fitted on one floppy disk. What's it called, MidiWorks, Orchestrator...
-
- KVRist
- 113 posts since 30 Oct, 2004
Thinking about it again: It would definitely be possible to do this with the CAL scripting language in Sonar. You would need to own a version of Sonar, or Cakewalk, obviously.
Unfortuntately, CAL isn't very easy to use.
You would probably get a real headache trying to do this, unless you're familiar with wierd programming languages like LISP. You could try searching... if you're lucky, maybe somebody has already written a CAL metronome script.
Unfortuntately, CAL isn't very easy to use.
-
- KVRAF
- 13444 posts since 14 Nov, 2000 from Hannover / Germany
What's so timeconsuming in creating a metronome track manually?
Set up one bar, copy it all over the song length and there you go. Eventually merge the copied parts when being done.
Doesn't even take a minute to set this up.
In case you have some signature changes, well, those would need to be corrected manually, but it shouldn't take more than 10 seconds per signature change (shorten/lengthen the metronome bar), so unless you have LOADS of signature changes all the procedure would still be done in under 2 minutes.
Set up one bar, copy it all over the song length and there you go. Eventually merge the copied parts when being done.
Doesn't even take a minute to set this up.
In case you have some signature changes, well, those would need to be corrected manually, but it shouldn't take more than 10 seconds per signature change (shorten/lengthen the metronome bar), so unless you have LOADS of signature changes all the procedure would still be done in under 2 minutes.
There are 3 kinds of people:
Those who can do maths and those who can't.
Those who can do maths and those who can't.
-
- KVRist
- Topic Starter
- 158 posts since 12 Jan, 2004
Hello Sacha,
I do understand 2 minutes is not long but kids are able to break a class down if they have to wait so long. This is really not possible in a class situation.
Thank you,
I do understand 2 minutes is not long but kids are able to break a class down if they have to wait so long. This is really not possible in a class situation.
Thank you,