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| quote: | Originally posted by b|p|3m
Nice transition, it sounds good and clear. No overbassing and no volume difference between the two tracks. I think to understand what you say...
Practice,practice & also practice,nothing else to do.
Thank u and thanks everybody for all replies, very useful.
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i'm glad i could help.. u know something that could hinder your style might be the way that you use ur mixer also.. for example, on my cheapass american dj mixer, i never really understood the "cue/pgm" knob, and so i always had it turned all the way to "cue" and basically i will only hear stuff if i select that channel..i'm referring to the "cue/mix" stereo split knob that is basically a fader between the "cue" and the "live" feeds. well anyhow, this can help you alot when adjusting levels.. cuz usually i'll leave that cue/live knob more towards the "cue" side so that i can hear the "cue" track louder while i'm beatmatching to the "live" track by wat i can hear outside but also compare to what you can hear of the "live" track on your headphones. then when u've got it matched, set the knob in the middle so its like having the xfader in the middle (except the knob is controlling the live/cue instead of both live mixes). now the reason this helps is because what you hear from the "live" part of the "live/cue" function is the same thing coming from the master (just not controlled by the master volume, but rather the gains/eq/volume-fader) so at this point you can play around and see what volumes are necessary. cuz although the "cue" track's volume-fader is all the way down at this point still, you will be controlling it through the "cue" function which is sending just as much feed to ur headphones as the "live" since u've got the knob in the middle (meaning that ur EQ/gain should be at the same level as if both tracks were in the "live" position). i feel that i'm getting a little confusing now, this is much easier to explain as a "hands-on" approach instead of me typing and you trying to picture this. if ur confused, i'm sorry, i can just tell u to fuck around w/ ur "live/cue" splitter knob and figure out how it works and how u can use it to your advantage. in my opinion, that is the best way to monitor ur EQ levels audibly, u can tell if a record will need to be turned higher in the gain because it may just not be as loud and you will be ready for it instead of thinking that ur mix is all perfect and then realizing that the now "live" track happens to be a bit softer or louder.. but yes, you were correct, just practise your ass off. u may have to get ur beatmatching down a little quicker because all of this just adds time to the process.. and ya kno how sometimes u decide to put on something else at the last second, well ur gonna run outta time if ur caught up still trying to beatmatch the record when u should be figuring out the EQ's by now; but u didn't mention beatmatching as a problem so i'll assume ur sufficient at that. and hey, just practice and always change things up, don't keep trying to go after that same transition because its just good to practise throwing records together that u never transitioned before. the last thing i gotta say for now is to know your records, know how they sound, know when they end, how they end/start etc.., this will greatly improve ur time deciding what track to play next because now that you can have an idea wat a transition will sound like by just looking at the record, u don't need to waste time actually taking it out and hearing it and seeing that 2 tracks don't go well together.. you also don't wanna get caught up w/ tunes that might have awkward melodies or one tune's melody kicks in 16counts before you expected it too... blahblah blah, most of all, remember that this is all for fun, everyone loves a clean mix, but no1 can love a mix anymore than the DJ who performed it or something like that, all i kno is i prolly get more satisfaction out of listening to my own mixes (when they're good) than anyone else cuz i kno i was successful in doing something that i love. aite peace.
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