<p>To copy a tempo, hold down the primary modifier and drag the tempo you wish to copy.</p>
<h3>Meter</h3>
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<p>Meter positions beats using the musical pulse of a tempo, and groups them into bars using its number of divisions per bar.
</p>
<p>The first meter in a new session may be moved freely. It has an associated tempo which cannot be dragged by itself (although all others can).
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<li>To copy a meter, hold down control and drag it.</li>
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<h3>Techniques </h3>
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<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>
<p>In a general sense, adding tempo markers in pairs allows you to 'pin' your previous work while you move further to the right.
</p>
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-Another use case : matching accelerando.
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+<h3>Another use case : matching accelerando</h3>
<p>Imagine you have some video and have located where your music cue begins. Move the first meter to that frame
(you may snap to TC frames, but not music with an audio locked meter).
</p>
</p>
<p>If your ramp doesn't feel correct, you may add more points within it and keep adjusting beat positions in a similar manner.
</p>
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<h3>General</h3>
<p>Audio locked meters can be useful when composing, as they allow a continuous piece of music to be worked on in