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| quote: | Originally posted by Stu Cox
The problem is that if you take a track which is in Am at 130 BPM and beatmatch it to 135 BPM, it's actually then half way between Am and Bbm (very slightly nearer Bbm), so if you've got a track which is bang on Am at 135 BPM and a track bang on Bbm at 135 BPM then it'll sound shit with both of them. The way I've found around this is to write, in this example,
"Am +3.8%"
(where the +3.8% is the pitch change needed to make it the standard tempo, 135 BPM in this case)
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I agree, but the same problem occurs with "doing the math" if you give it a +/- "tolerance" then some songs will be that slight semi-tone off and imo it will sound like crap. say you follow a +/- 2% rule, and one song is +2%, and the other is -2%, you are assuming that they will probably work when in fact there is a 4% difference between the tracks. you know what i mean? i just think that using a tolerance is somewhat like guessing: they may not be quite right but by doing the math and looking at it on paper you can reasonably assume that they'll sound ok..
if you do it as i do, all of the songs that are say.. in between Bb and B (a semitone at best) will mix with each other and you'll know not to mix it with the straight up B or Bb tunes. however a lot of times the semitones are so minute that most people won't hear the difference. and 90% of the time, the songs fit in an actual key and not a semitone, there are very few songs in my list that are like, an A#b or however you wanna describe it. and in the end, i would rather have a list that says "this song, this song, and this song are in the same key" than "this song, when pitched a certain percentage, will most likely be in key with... wait lemme bust out the calculator and the pencil.." it's the same method as just knowing your tunes are in the same key, which i'm assuming is how dj's did it before all this mumbo jumbo came about. and furthermore it's a breeze to key your tunes to a certain tempo with a proggie like traktor where you can just hit "sync" and figure it out from there.
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