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I think it can be done if your starting off with an ambient/downtempo track and you the incoming track has a higher BPM. Match the first 16 or 32 bars and then bring it back up gradually to around the original BPM, so that your whole mix isn't the same BPM as the ambient/downtempo track, which most are like 120 and under. I mean if your going from an ambient track to a progressive house track with an ambient intro, it works without doing much to the tempo, cause you would likely do a quick fade in. If your going from the ambient track to a track that just starts off with a kickdrum, your best bet is to gradually increase it in intervals. However, the tracks should still be somewhat in the same vacinity BPM wise (no more than 10 bpms a part i'de say), your not going to go from a 115 bpm ambient track to a 135 bpm trance track. With Master Tempo, doing these kinds of things sounds a lot better, but those are mostly on CDJs, not TTs (a few have "key correction").
Last edited by Spirit5 on Dec-06-2006 at 06:58
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