OK, but beat-detection is normally implemented to match beats to beats, not beats to soloing violin :-)
Say you are playing quarter-notes for one measure at 92 bpm, next at 88 bpm, next at 95 bpm and next at 95 bmp. Then next four bars you're playing eight-notes in similar tempos. The machine would effectively alter its rhythm about 6 times in 8 bars, which is not what you want.
What you want is to make a few rhythm changes in one piece, and for the rest the beat to stay constant. Those changes are best determined either by a tapped rhythm or at set places in the composition.
(no subject)
Date: 2005-11-11 09:50 am (UTC)Say you are playing quarter-notes for one measure at 92 bpm, next at 88 bpm, next at 95 bpm and next at 95 bmp. Then next four bars you're playing eight-notes in similar tempos. The machine would effectively alter its rhythm about 6 times in 8 bars, which is not what you want.
What you want is to make a few rhythm changes in one piece, and for the rest the beat to stay constant. Those changes are best determined either by a tapped rhythm or at set places in the composition.