As you own the full applications, then you in generel can assign the tempo settings in your applications to a Macro in AL3.
(The tempo parameters is only avaible when owning the full applications.)(It can be tricky - if possible at all - doing this in free mode using sequences from different applications. But there should be no issues if the sequnces is created in the same application or if the tempo settings can be adjusted in the macro to match when changing tempo.)In a DAW your MIDI SYNC sequences sync to the tempo set in the DAW.
For standalone you need to set a global tempo in another manor. I can use my keyboard to send out a global clock tempo. Please have a look at this topic:
https://forum.arturia.com/index.php?topic=93087.0Congratulation with your Keylab 49 MKII. I hope it's good. I don't know if it send out a global clock to use for standalone applications. I hope it does. A quick look in the manual say it can control DAW tempo, so perhaps it does'nt send global clock. That i think Arturia should add, if it can't.
Can't Keylab 49 MKII send out a global clock to use for standalone applications Arturia?But your sequences adjust to a global clock.
When no settings has been done when outside a DAW, then the tempo probably is 120 BPM, but i can't tell for certain.However. No matter you are in a DAW or outside a DAW and wan't to MIDI SYNC, then your sequences adjust to the global tempo. And if a sequence is set to run twice the tempo, then it runs twice as fast as the global tempo and so on. Many of Modulars tempo synced presets are unfortunately running a sequence meant to be for an 4/4 beat as it's for example 8 or 16 steps but is set to run 3Xtempo. That make it very difficult to use. The sequence is probaably set to run 3xtempo because the delay does'nt create tempo synced triplets (
Or other patterns like syncopated patterns), and i have created feature requsts for this and wished it for years.
You can think of it this way as an example:
1. The global clock is a tempo set by the conductor in an orchestra.
2. However different musicians/ instruments in the orchestra play notes of different values. That can be 2xtempo, 3xtempo (triplets), 2/tempo and so on. The musicians/ instruments playing is your different sequences. That's why you can and should be able to set the tempo for your sequences relative to the main clock. This is how MIDI SYNC works now.
(There can be other things affecting tempo and note length in the applications.)(So MIDI SYNC does'nt mean all notes have the same note length as you seem to think, as that would be very limiting creatively.)