Editing Timing in ReasonIf you are performing on a MIDI keyboard to record tracks, you may want to clean up the timing of your performance. In the old days, this task was a niare and usually meant either retaking an entire part, or splicing multiple takes together with tape and a razor blade. Using quantization, Reason makes it easy to input perfectly timed notes or to alter mistimed notes without any fuss. Quantization corrects timing, conforming it to a grid that's set to a specific value, such as eighth notes, sixteenth notes, or quarter notes. Notes that do not fall precisely on a grid boundary are moved to the nearest grid slot, or "time-corrected." Adjusting grid resolution can be a powerful tool for writing parts with your mouseit's easy to switch from one grid value to another for more complex drum parts.
Snap-to-Grid and QuantizationTo help make timing adjustments easy, Reason has a number of quantization controls located on top of the Sequencer window. Reason has three ways of cleaning up timing: snapping notes to a grid, record quantize, and quantization edit. Let's look at snap-to-grid first. Snapping notes to a grid allows you to input perfectly timed notes with the mouse. The timing of your notes is set in the grid resolution menu. By default, Reason snaps all the notes you input to the nearest sixteenth note. At most tempos, sixteenth notes are rapid and a challenge for most performers to execute with precision. For sequencing notes in time, it is a good middle-of-the-road value for beat making. To snap a note to grid using the mouse
To add triplets
Once you get the hang of switching note values and hearing the result, you'll be able to use Reason's Snap to Grid function to write parts quickly. The record quantize method fixes notes to a grid during recording with a MIDI keyboard, cleaning up timing before notes are written to a track. (You'll read more about this in the next section, "Using an External MIDI Input Device.") And lastly, quantize edit is a clean-up method for notes that are already written to a track. It has the advantage of working only on the note or series of notes you select. You can record performances exactly as played and then quantize only those notes that need it. To quantize edit
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