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I wrote a MIDI song with 90 BPM, but then realized that it was too fast for me. When I then tried to slow it down to 80 BPM, I noticed that my MIDI notes were no longer in time. Some of my tracks were "shortened" after the tempo change and don't match the rest of the tracks any more. Other tracks are perfectly in time. What am I doing wrong?

Windows 10 64bit, Studio One Pro 6.2.1, Native Instruments Reaktor, Midi Fighter Twister, Presonus Audiobox One.
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by Steve Carter on Fri Jan 21, 2022 5:00 pm
Do you have a mix of Instrument (midi) and audio tracks?

Windows 10 Pro/i7 6800k @3.4Ghz/16Gb ram. Studio One 6 Pro, Melodyne Editor, Vocalign Project 5, Superior Drummer 3, Izotope Music Production Suite 6, Komplete 13 and various other plugins. Focusrite Saffire Pro 40, Faderport, Focal Alpha 50's, Korg Pa3x, Korg Pad Kontrol, numerous guitars, basses & other antiquated outboard gear.
Maybe one day I'll actually finish a project!
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by Jemusic on Fri Jan 21, 2022 5:24 pm
Make sure your Instrument tracks (Midi) timebase is set to beats (not seconds) and your audio tracks timebase is set to Stretch. Then audio and midi tracks should change together and stay in sync.

The timebase settings are in the track header itself.

Specs i5-2500K 3.5 Ghz-8 Gb RAM-Win 7 64 bit - ATI Radeon HD6900 Series - RME HDSP9632 - Midex 8 Midi interface - Faderport 2/8 - Atom Pad/Atom SQ - HP Laptop Win 10 - Studio 24c interface -iMac 2.5Ghz Core i5 - High Sierra 10.13.6 - Focusrite Clarett 2 Pre & Scarlett 18i20. Studio One V5.5 (Mac and V6.5 Win 10 laptop), Notion 6.8, Ableton Live 11 Suite, LaunchPad Pro

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