In Logic you record with the metronome off and it starts to detect the fluctuations in what you are playing. I think the important part is the tempo detection so that if you want to adjust the tempo, or apply a fixed tempo for the whole track etc you can without have to do tempo mapping after the fact. Again it's about saving a step. It would be pointless to have a metronome going off while the DAW is detecting the tempo initially.pixel85 wrote: Tue Nov 08, 2022 7:58 am If you don't want to play to rigid grid, then just don't do that. Turn metronome off. It's really that simple.
After recording let DAW assign tempo based on your recording. Your DAW can't do it? Get one that can. I bet you can afford it.
First time I hear that DAW is forcing people to do something one way. Is your DAW threatening you that if you don't follow static bpm, it will post your private silly pictures on social media?![]()
Just set timeline to linear (seconds, minutes), don't turn on metronome and you're free to do what you whatever you want.
For me it sounds like another artificial excuse of "technology makes me do it". No it doesn't. It's peoples decision to follow rigid static tempo. And it's not like all musicians are doing this.
Traditionally you would handle this by playing your track without a click track, then run a tempo map (most DAWs do this except maybe Ableton and Bitwig(?)). However Logic removes the step of having to tempo map after the fact, it just does it on the fly as you play in. The cool thing is that the tempo can vary and it will detect that as a tempo map while you play. Note by Ableton if I'm not mistaken only detects a fixed tempo, but its an app and its meant as a sketch pad so not that big a deal imo.
To me its about reducing steps not necessarily giving the DAW more control, but to reduce steps to get to results faster.