![]() ![]() ![]() I promise you, as I do this for a living and I teach pro tools at community college that EVERY single time a student has this issue its because they aren't on the grid or the source sample is flawed and needs to be adjusted. I'll give you my email and you can send me the thing you want looped and what tempo- I will email you back a 4 bar loop that you can Command-D and it will line up the whole way. ALso, you said you "recorded-" most likely your performance is slightly flawed, as all humans are, but again its not a problem, as long as the beginning and ends are correct you can create a perfect loop, every time. ![]() If its the second, you absolutely CAN adjust the drums or whatever you have sampled so it fits exactly on the grid- you can use elastic audio, tab to transient and do it by hand, etc. Is the grid tempo of your session the SAME EXACT tempo as your samples or is it possible the samples themselves are not exactly on the lines? If its the first, fix it. Recording options overlap with the ability to loop playback, and some functionality only applies to MIDI, and some to audio, so the aim of this article is to describe and clarify each option. You aren't exactly on the grid, you regions (or clips I think they call them now) aren't 100% snapped to the grid so this is why there is slow drift over time. Pro Tools offers a range of options when it comes to recording while cycling around the same playback selection. ![]()
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