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tough dj question
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| dj jasonF |
when i play at home with my not-so-good sound system i beatmatch 2 songs and in my headphones there is a double beat... i mean instead of:
beat
beat
,
beat
.beat
a really small difference but i can hear it in my headphones. then the crossfader is up the 2 tracks sound 100% beatmatched.
i was wondering if this would happen in a good sound system in a club or something.
opinions? |
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| Matty V |
| Probably, but when i used to record my sets (on cassette) and the beats were very slight off you couldnt really notice |
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| sleepydragon |
| tracks dont really need to be perfectly beat matched as long as u have mixed it well u probably wont notice |
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| dj jasonF |
| but if they are not perf youll still be able to hear it in your headphones and not live. right? |
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| |cEbLu3 |
| it depends on the beat, when beat matching 2 songs, if one has a more booming longer bass beat, and the other has a shorter one, the beats might be in sync, but it sounds a lil off, and u have to move the shorter beat to back or forward a lil. |
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| dj_lane |
| quote: | Originally posted by dj jasonF
when i play at home with my not-so-good sound system i beatmatch 2 songs and in my headphones there is a double beat... i mean instead of:
beat
beat
,
beat
.beat
a really small difference but i can hear it in my headphones. then the crossfader is up the 2 tracks sound 100% beatmatched.
i was wondering if this would happen in a good sound system in a club or something.
opinions? |
try cutting your bass, on the incoming track |
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| tomfoord |
| i reckon that when 2 tracks are very slightly out its not the beats that you notice, its the higher frequency percussion sounds which sound wrong. |
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| dj jasonF |
| quote: | Originally posted by tomfoord
i reckon that when 2 tracks are very slightly out its not the beats that you notice, its the higher frequency percussion sounds which sound wrong. |
true... but im talking about the beats |
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