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Here are a few tips that you can practice with. First, try slowing one way down and keep increasing the speed until you match the tracks. This way you know that the one you slowed way down is the slow one, period. Also, when you are mixing, I perfer to listen to the tracks that I have assumably matched for about 60 seconds. This makes it for sure that I DO infact have them beatmatched, and if I don't then I try speeding up or slowing down the cue track to try to rebeatmatch the tracks. This way, when I'm in the middle of the mix, I already know if my cue track is going to need to be sped up or slowed down before I'm making the transition.
Just take it slow and keep practicing. Slow moves on the jog or record will help too. If you slowly speed the cue track up and it gets worse, then you know that you have to slow it down and vise versa. Also, don't just use the bass beats, sometimes they can be pretty confusing to which beat is coming from which track. Try to listen to the high hats or other instruments that you know are from the cue track or the live track.
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