creeptown wrote:Just wondering in regards to bpms, what is segment bpm (the one that you get at the bottom of the screen where you can select warp and such. Should segment bpm be 140 also? ive noticed if you change that tho the speed changes a lot...
what version are you running?
whenever you load a new audio clip, ableton will make a guess at what that clips bpm is, which is the segment bpm. each audio clip has a bpm and is independent of the global tempo. as you've stated, messing about with segment bpm can bring about drastic results, but i find it to be really useful when warping. here's how i used segment bpm in live 8:
say you're doing a set at 140 and you want to throw in some stuff with differing tempos. if you can find the tracks bpm on your own (whether by calculating it out yourself or using detection software) it makes warping in live ridiculously easy. okay, so say my global bpm is 140 and i want to throw in some 130ish beats, as soon as you load the clips you'll see that the waveform doesn't exactly line up. place a warp marker on the first visible transient of the beat and right click ---> start 1.1.1. here. make sure there are no other visible warp markers that live has automatically added (if so, just delete them). so after you set 1.1.1. here just click that first warp marker and you'll see the segment bpm section for that clip activate. if you know the tracks original bpm just enter that value into the seg. bpm box and it's as easy as that, the track will align perfectly if the bpm you provided for the clip is correct.
so thus if the clips you are working with are 140 bpm dubstep, then the segment bpm should be 140. basically it's okay for the segment bpm to be at a different value than the global tempo you're working at, as the segment bpm is relative to each specific clip.
hope that helps!