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dj_lane
Timeless

Registered: Jul 2004
Location: MNTA #7 /// AvidTechno.com
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it doesnt seem, from your description, that you have them matched, It may be your decks' flutter, maybe to compensate this, have your pitch a little bit higher than what you thing the 'sweet spot' is. Then just use your finger on your platter to lightly slow it down
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Mar-07-2005 00:18
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Frase
www.frase.org.uk
Registered: Feb 2003
Location: Coventry, Warwickshire
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if you're having to adjust it then it isnt in beat!
use your hands for the quick precise method of keeping it in time for more than 30secs-1min then you'll be reet
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frase.org.uk - music & stuff
myspace
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Mar-07-2005 00:30
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DannyO
The Vinyl Hunter

Registered: May 2003
Location: Calgary.
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| quote: | Originally posted by Zild
I think you are asking a lot from yourself. It takes most people years to master riding the pitch. If your tracks only stay matched for 10 seconds then they're not matched, try making smaller adjustments. If you have to adjust it down to keep it in beat then you have to move it up 10 seconds after that then back down your missing your sweet spot and not making fine enough adjustments to the pitch fader. |
Exactly, you just need more practice, beatmatching is easy to learn but hard to master, and that mastering takes years, you need to be able to beatmatch for it to last about 30 seconds to a minute, thats would be pretty good, longer would be better obviously, but also you gotta learn how to quickly hear and fix a track that is drifting, even when you mastered beatmatching, you will never nail EVERY transition you do, so you have to learn how to be a pro at fixing a drifting transition, Armins a pro at mixing, aswell as Carl Cox and many other DJs, but they have times that the tracks will drift, but there good at hearing it before 99% of the worlds population will hear it and fix it right away, and this is something you will have to learn.
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Mar-07-2005 03:15
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J:\Digital
Guest
Registered: Not Yet
Location:
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| quote: | Originally posted by DannyO
Armins a pro at mixing, aswell as Carl Cox and many other DJs, but they have times that the tracks will drift, but there good at hearing it before 99% of the worlds population will hear it and fix it right away, and this is something you will have to learn. |
I believe this is really "PART" of what seperates great DJ's from the average bedroom DJ in some cases.
The slightest adjustment of the pitch fader makes a difference, you are obviously moving it far to much.. be gentle, not drastic. 
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Mar-07-2005 04:13
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sleepydragon
Supreme tranceaddict

Registered: Oct 2003
Location: doncaster, england
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Mar-07-2005 13:22
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sandstorm03
...
Registered: Feb 2003
Location:
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Mar-08-2005 02:15
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