link749 link750 link751 link752 link753 link754 link755 link756 link757 link758 link759 link760 link761 link762 link763 link764 link765 link766 link767 link768 link769 link770 link771 link772 link773 link774 link775 link776 link777 link778 link779 link780 link781 link782 link783 link784 link785 link786 link787 link788 link789 link790 link791 link792 link793 link794 link795 link796 link797 link798 link799 link800 link801 link802 link803 link804 link805 link806 link807 link808 link809 link810 link811 link812 link813 link814 link815 link816 link817 link818 link819 link820 link821 link822 link823 link824 link825 link826 link827 link828 link829 link830 link831 link832 link833 link834 link835 link836 link837 link838 link839 link840 link841 link842 link843 link844 link845 link846 link847 link848 link849 link850 link851 link852 link853 link854 link855

Friday Tip: Make Mastered Songs Better with Tempo Changes — PreSonus Blog

Friday Tip: Make Mastered Songs Better with Tempo Changes — PreSonus Blog

n the process of researching an article for Sweetwater.com about what made classic rock sound “classic,” I analyzed tempo variations in songs without click tracks. The consistency of these changes was surprising. Although the changes did not have machine-like precision, they were far from being random or sloppy. They tended to follow particular patterns not only in different songs, but different genres.