link963 link964 link965 link966 link967 link968 link969 link970 link971 link972 link973 link974 link975 link976 link977 link978 link979 link980 link981 link982 link983 link984 link985 link986 link987 link988 link989 link990 link991 link992 link993 link994 link995 link996 link997 link998 link999 link1000 link1001 link1002 link1003 link1004 link1005 link1006 link1007 link1008 link1009 link1010 link1011 link1012 link1013 link1014 link1015 link1016 link1017 link1018 link1019 link1020 link1021 link1022 link1023 link1024 link1025 link1026 link1027 link1028 link1029 link1030 link1031 link1032 link1033 link1034 link1035 link1036 link1037 link1038 link1039 link1040 link1041 link1042 link1043 link1044 link1045 link1046 link1047 link1048 link1049 link1050 link1051 link1052 link1053 link1054 link1055 link1056 link1057 link1058 link1059 link1060 link1061 link1062 link1063 link1064 link1065 link1066 link1067 link1068 link1069

Friday Tip: Tempo Changes for Already Mixed Songs — Reloaded — PreSonus Blog

Friday Tip: Tempo Changes for Already Mixed Songs — Reloaded — PreSonus Blog

The June 22, 2018 tip covered how to make mastered songs better with tempo changes, but there was some pushback because it wasn’t easy to make these kinds of changes in Studio One. Fortunately, it seems like the developers were listening, because it’s now far easier to change tempo. I’ve been refining various tempo-changing techniques over the past year (and had a chance to gauge reactions to songs using tempo changes compared to those that didn’t), so it seemed like the time is right to re-visit this topic.