Sonar 8.5 Producer

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bump2sufflue
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2015/07/25 16:27:39 (permalink)

Sonar 8.5 Producer

I have recorded a tune and everything was fine until I shut everything down and came back the next day and now during playback the tempo has slowed and key has changed . 
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    slartabartfast
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    Re: Sonar 8.5 Producer 2015/07/25 17:10:08 (permalink)
    Tempo change is a term of art for MIDI and Sonar and it means that a setting within the project has changed. I assume that is not what you mean, but rather in the musical sense that the project plays slower. Key change is a musical term of art and it means that the scale has changed but that the pitch/intonation of the notes has not. I assume that is not what you mean, but in the physical sense that the pitch of all the notes has shifted to a lower frequency. Slower and lower in digital audio is a common symptom of a sample rate mismatch-recording at a higher sample rate, playing back at a lower sample rate. If the difference is something like 96 K to 44.1 K, I assume you would have said something other than the key has changed as the distortion would have been dramatic. Usually the problem is between 48 K (ADAT standard) and 44.1 K (CD standard)--your music has changed but it is still recognizable. If you want help to figure out why this happened, you need to provide a detailed account of how you recorded and how you are playing back with special attention to the sample rate settings of any equipment or software you were using. That would be a useful exercise if you do not want this to happen again. If you just want to fix the problem, with a particular wave file, there are ways to do that.
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    robert_e_bone
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    Re: Sonar 8.5 Producer 2015/07/25 18:15:47 (permalink)
    The first thing I thought of, as well, is a change to the sample rate, which will cause both tempo and pitch to change.
     
    You can look at the properties of audio clips to see the bit-rate and from that, you can determine that audio clip's Recording Bit-Depth and the Sample Rate.  So, right-click on the desired audio clip file, then click on Properties, then click on Details, and you can see the Bit Rate.  Then find the Bit Rate below, and you will see I have provided the Sample Rate and Bit-Depths for that clip, that produce the Bit-Rate that is displayed in Properties for the clip.
     
    Bit Rate is the product of Bit Depth and Sample Rate.   Here are the Bit-Depth and Sample Rate values that produce commonly seen Bit-Rates:
     
    The following Bit-Rates come from multiplying their Sample Rates x Bit-Depth
     
    Bit-Rate = Sample Rate X Bit-Depth, so:
     
    706 kbps = 44.1 x 16 (705.6 rounded up to 706)
    1058 kbps = 44.1 x 24 (1058.4 rounded down to 1056)
     
    768 kbps = 48 x 16 (768 even, so no rounding)
    1152 kbps = 48 x 24 (1152 even, so no rounding)


    Hope that helps, 
     
    Bob Bone
     

    Wisdom is a giant accumulation of "DOH!"
     
    Sonar: Platinum (x64), X3 (x64) 
    Audio Interfaces: AudioBox 1818VSL, Steinberg UR-22
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    Soft Synths: NI Komplete 8 Ultimate, Arturia V Collection, many others
    MIDI Controllers: M-Audio Axiom Pro 61, Keystation 88es
    Settings: 24-Bit, Sample Rate 48k, ASIO Buffer Size 128, Total Round Trip Latency 9.7 ms  
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