 |
|
|
|
 |
Tony Morello
The Renegade Master

Registered: Apr 2001
Location: Calgary, Alberta, Canada
|
|
|
Mar-26-2002 16:14
|
|
|
 |
 |
oDrori
howdy

Registered: Dec 2001
Location: Kibbutz Gaash, home of all the light in Holyland
|
|
|
Yes the snares / claps etc. are ussualy (I have to say it again because this could seriously fuck U up), ussually, in breaks just like in 4beats. But lookeout for "Clap - Tricks", you know, like there's not only a clap every second beat but also there are extra claps and claps that do not come in the exact place...
Try to know the track as much as you can if you're mixing it because breaks can really screw you over. Try to imagine the 4 beats yourself, you'll get it eventually.
-That's as far as beatmatching goes...
As for mixing, in my opinion, the cases where you can have the kicks heard both on the break track and on the 4 beat track without the mix sounding eaky are rare.
Try to do it as quick as you can : slam one track's bass off and the other on, not simultanously cause that's sounds kinda weird when the hard 4 beat kick changes into another track's, sometimes a more gentle breakbeat's kick. Slam one kick off, then the other on... You know wd I mean...
No matter how hard you try, mixing between breaks and 4beats will probably sound weird anyway so try to "Concentrate" your break tracks one after the other.
CyA
___________________
Check My Music
|
|
Mar-26-2002 16:23
|
|
|
 |
 |
DJTJ
linuXaddict

Registered: Jan 2001
Location: Bournemouth, UK when I'm at home, Cardiff, UK when I'm at uni
|
|
|
| quote: | Originally posted by oDrori
Yes the snares / claps etc. are ussualy (I have to say it again because this could seriously fuck U up), ussually, in breaks just like in 4beats. But lookeout for "Clap - Tricks", you know, like there's not only a clap every second beat but also there are extra claps and claps that do not come in the exact place...
Try to know the track as much as you can if you're mixing it because breaks can really screw you over. Try to imagine the 4 beats yourself, you'll get it eventually.
-That's as far as beatmatching goes...
As for mixing, in my opinion, the cases where you can have the kicks heard both on the break track and on the 4 beat track without the mix sounding eaky are rare.
Try to do it as quick as you can : slam one track's bass off and the other on, not simultanously cause that's sounds kinda weird when the hard 4 beat kick changes into another track's, sometimes a more gentle breakbeat's kick. Slam one kick off, then the other on... You know wd I mean...
No matter how hard you try, mixing between breaks and 4beats will probably sound weird anyway so try to "Concentrate" your break tracks one after the other.
CyA |
Good advice. Listen to this!
|
|
Mar-26-2002 21:37
|
|
|
 |
 |
|
 |
 |
oDrori
howdy

Registered: Dec 2001
Location: Kibbutz Gaash, home of all the light in Holyland
|
|
|
Glad 2 help + Thanx DJTJ 
Just wanted to add that some tracks have both breakbeats and 4 beats;
In Trance, ussually a track as a beraks intro, and before the second climax there's another breaks part.
These track are good for using to shake the crowd out of the funkiness and abit more calm state of breakbeats.
IE Kai Tracid's "Trance and Acid" (Jesus, what a shake!) or Blank & Jones' D.F.F (CG mix and Sometimes Club mix- see why-)
This works with tracks that begin with a nice little breakbeat and turn harder and nastier, then finish with 4 beats.
Some tracks begin with breaks and then turn 4 and end with breaks, IE B&J - D.F.F. (Club mix) now these ones are good cause the breakbeat is pretty gentle and can be used to shift 4 beats both in an out of the track, both using a slam or even putting the breaks on the 4, cause it's way more gentle than the 4 beat (beware from energy loss when mixing that stuff in when there's gentle break-kicks).
Watch out of breakbeats with a bad-ass pumping kick like D.F.F. (Cosmic Gate remix). Put that on along with the 4 beat kicks and the crowd will just give you the finger.
Tracks like "FC- Punk" both begin AND end with a pretty gentle 4 beat kick that can both be smoothed in with an out-fading 4 beat track (Now this is a pretty smooth transition between 4 beat and breaks cause that's how the track's designed!) or slam in when mixing Punk in (Think of this as giving the crowd a 40-seconds break off the breakbeats into the 4 beat and then getting back there ) Also, since the 4 beat kicks are not that powerfull (hell, they're weaker than the break-kicks), there won't be alot of energy loss when you slam them out when an incoming breakbeat track moves in. Tracks that have a break on both the beginning and the end are ideal cause they are both in-faders and out-faders.
Ofcourse, tracks that begin with 4 beats and end with breakbeats are excellent to shift from 4 to breaks but no-one makes those anymore 
Anyways, thise whole post was meant to solve the "No matter how hard you try, mixing between breaks and 4beats will probably sound weird anyway" problem.
CyA
___________________
Check My Music
|
|
Mar-27-2002 22:47
|
|
|
 |
 |
|  |
All times are GMT. The time now is 04:31.
Forum Rules:
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not edit your posts
|
HTML code is ON
vB code is ON
[IMG] code is ON
|
|
|
|
|
|
Contact Us - return to tranceaddict
Powered by: Trance Music & vBulletin Forums
Copyright ©2000-2026, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Privacy Statement / DMCA
|