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chris harrington
Uncovered

Registered: Dec 2005
Location: Vancouver, Canada
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Aug-22-2007 06:43
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Shini
Senior tranceaddict

Registered: Apr 2007
Location: Brisbane, Australia
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I'm only very new to harmonic mixing myself but I can help you with the "2A" part, its a system called Camelot that makes knowing which tunes are in key much easier. Basically it consists of a clock face type circular image that is split into sectors, each with a key, i.e E major and a code i.e 12B. the image and an explanation of how to use it can be found at their website, just Google it, I don't have the link right now.
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Pioneer CDJ-200s, Sony MDR-V700DJ,ASUS M51Sn Ableton Live 8, Behringer BCF-2000, Behringer BCR-2000, Vestax VMC-004FX
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Aug-22-2007 06:54
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Omega_Blue
Someone Changed My Custom

Registered: Dec 2003
Location: Gone
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dude, the camelot system is just a glorified circle of fifths, and i personally find it sickening that they actually trademarked a name for said circle of fifths.
1. i personally use either my guitar or the 3xOSC in FL studio to key my tracks. a good rule of thumb is to listen to the lowest sounding note in the bassline of a track- that's usually the root note (though it's not always the case). plink around until you play the same note on your keyboard. whatever the root note happens to be, that's the key of your tune. assume 90% of the time the track is in a minor key unless it sounds really "weird" (that's just the trend in most EDM we spin). many times the first note of a repeating phrase happens to be the root note also (though once again you should never depend on it), just because that happens to be a trend in creating music.
2. that you just have to know. read about music theory. i mainly use intervals (the relationship between two notes) and relative keys (two different keys that share all of the same notes) to mix. mixing parallel keys (two different keys with the same root notes) usually works too, but sometimes there will be dissonant notes here and there that'll make the mix sound shitty. once again you probably won't be mixing a whole lot of parallel keys since most of the music we spin is in a minor key.
google "musical intervals" and "relative key". interval-wise, the least dissonant intervals for me is unison/octave (obviously), perfect forth, perfect fifth, major second, and sometimes major/minor 3rd. the most dissonant for me is minor second and tritone (augmented 4th/diminished 5th) so i usually avoid mixing between tunes with those intervals (though some will disagree with me about that).
3. i don't pay attention to that shit. not sure, but i assume the "2a" pertains to which octave it is above or below middle c on the piano, but in all honesty that shouldn't really mean shit when you're mixing. D#m is D#m, no matter what octave it's at, and i'm pretty sure there isn't a whole lot of house/trance out there that deviates too much from the middle octaves.
if you have any other questions i'd be glad to help.
Last edited by Omega_Blue on Aug-22-2007 at 09:03
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Aug-22-2007 08:12
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b1_
Supreme tranceaddict
Registered: Jun 2003
Location: Brisbane
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Rapid Evolution music database software has some info on harmonic mixing here:
[[ LINK REMOVED ]]
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Aug-22-2007 09:50
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Domesticated
Supreme tranceaddict
Registered: Feb 2007
Location:
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| quote: | Originally posted by b1_
Rapid Evolution music database software has some info on harmonic mixing here:
[[ LINK REMOVED ]]
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Awesome!
Thanks, that's really helpful too.
These two bits ring really true for me, this is what I was trying to say before:
Most DJs have developed an ear for music, and when listening to a song or mix that is off-key, a mental alarm is triggered and it will sound noticably sour or unpleasant.
Many advanced DJs already mix harmonically by a hit or miss method, although they may not know it. They already spend extra time to test potential mixes, and only use those which pass. By applying harmonic music theory and intelligently selecting songs, a DJ can eliminate countless hours of wasted test mixing.
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Mix archive | Melbourne club guide
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Aug-22-2007 12:22
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