7.1

Table Of Contents
AUDIO EDITING IN THE SEQUENCER
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1. Open an audio clip in the Comp Editor.
In this example we use a Comp clip with four Comp Rows and a number of Cuts. The tempo scaling works exactly
the same way, regardless if the clip is a Single Take clip or Comp clip.
2. With the Arrow Tool selected, hold down [Ctrl](Win) or [Option](Mac) and place the mouse cursor over one of
the Clip Resize handles (in the Clip Overview).
When you reach any of the Clip Resize handles, the arrow symbol switches to a “scale tempo” arrow.
3. Hold down [Ctrl](Win)/[Option](Mac) and click and drag the cursor sideways in either direction to scale the
tempo of the clip.
In this example, we make the clip one bar longer by dragging the right clip handle one bar to the right.
Now, the audio clip has been tempo scaled and the audio recordings have been stretched to match the new clip
length. Note that the distance between the Cuts, as well as the lengths of the recordings on all Comp Rows have
been expanded proportionally.
! When you use the Scale Tempo function on Single Take clips (in Arrange Mode), the Slice Markers will follow
the detected transients proportionally.
The Scale Tempo function can also be applied to clips numerically in the Tool Window, see “Scale Tempo”.
! When you tempo scale large clips, it could take a while before the high quality stretch is finished, see “Preview
vs. High Quality Stretching”.