-<h3>Techniques </h3>
-<p>As a general approach, the best way to control tempo ramps is to use them in pairs.
-</p>
-<p>Lets imagine we want to match the click to a drum performance recorded in 'free time'.<br>
-The first thing we need to do is determine where the first beat is. Drag the first meter to that position.
-</p>
-<p>Now the first click will be in time with the first beat. To get all the other beats to align, we listen to the drums
-and visually locate the position of bar 4. You may wish to place the playhead here.
-</p>
-<p>We then locate bar 4 in the bbt ruler and while holding the constraint modifier, drag it to bar 4 in the drum performance.
-</p>
-<p>We notice that the click now matches the first 4 bars, but after that it wanders off.
-You will see this reflected in the tempo lines.. they won't quite match the drum hits.
-We now locate the earliest position where the click doesn't match, and place a new tempo just before this.
-Two bars later, place another new tempo.
-</p>
-<p>Now while dragging any beat <strong>after</strong> the second new tempo, watch the drum audio and tempo lines until they align.
-</p>
-<p class="note">Notice what is happeneing here: the tempo previous to your mouse pointer is being changed so that the beat you grabbed
-aligns with the pointer.
-Notice that the tempo lines previous to the changed one also move. This is because the previous tempo is ramping <strong>to</strong> the tempo you are changing.
-Look further to the left. The tempo lines in the first four bars do not move.
-</p>
-<p>Again, some time later the click will not align. I didn't say this was easy.