I have only used the roland to practice with its click track without playing anything in cubase. When I feel comfortable with parts I want to record in cubase, I turn off its metronome and record in cubase to its click track. I have to have the TD50x midi rcv/trs on to record it in cubase but I’m not using any synchronization and haven’t even tried to record on the TD50x yet.
I had to spend the earlier part of the morning to feed the lions.
Sorry. OT.
Are you using a tempo track in CB or any kind of MIDI clock/SMPTE code anywhere in your chain/settings?
This is nuts. This is a BUG. It’s not some config thing. I have tried everything to fix this in an existing project but it is SET THIS WAY PERMANENTLY.
For me the experience is that my count-in tempo is ~120 and my song is 161.
If the only fix for this is to create a NEW PROJECT then THERE IS A BUG YOU NEED TO FIX.
I have toggled the Tempo Track on and off and THIS IS NOT THE PROBLEM. THERE IS A BUG .
BUG TITLE:
The COUNT-IN TEMPO IS > OR < THE BASE TEMPO when the Tempo Track IS DISABLED.
Get a tester on this please. Here are the vectors of attack. Seriously…
- Create a new project.
- Change the tempo.
- Unchange the tempo.
- Keep f******* around with ANYTHING TEMPO until the following state is achieved:
The COUNT-IN TEMPO IS > OR < THE BASE TEMPO when the Tempo Track IS DISABLED.
Seriously, this should take a good tester less than a day to reproduce. After than you can work out how to trace the spaghetti.
You have to fix this stuff. It is simply not acceptable to have 2 bars of count-in at 120 bpm and the song at 161.
AGAIN PLEASE. THERE IS NO TOGGLING OF TWIDDLES THAT FIXES THE PROGRAM’S ERROR. THIS IS NOT A USER PROBLEM. THIS IS A BUG.
Hi, everything @baron said is completely true, even if maybe his form is lacking some polish.
There is currently a serious unaddressed bug in Cubase whereby the count-in tempo becomes disjoint with the actual project tempo, even if the tempo track is disabled. No amount of fiddling with the settings works around it. Please take this seriously.
It’s been quite a while since I posted that, but I think it turned out to be related to my digitally recording tapes at 48H and playing back at 44H.