I have a question! If I take a song with 128BPM to A deck and take another song with 130BPM to B deck and syncronize it also to 128BPM to mix it, after I stop the previous song can I take it back to the original tempo (130BPM) or avoid it? I'm just a beginer and I don't know that :/ Thanks your answer :)
Yes, you can always move back to the original tempo. You just cannot adjust one track to a different bpm while mixing with another track at the same time - that would be too difficult.
Thank you for sharing your process. its a great way to know your music and understand beat matching.
you've improved since the 2014 vids. keep up the good work
You could mix your mic into the mixer, so we could hear the music better!
hope more video from our man
thanks
Dope! thank you!
I have a question! If I take a song with 128BPM to A deck and take another song with 130BPM to B deck and syncronize it also to 128BPM to mix it, after I stop the previous song can I take it back to the original tempo (130BPM) or avoid it? I'm just a beginer and I don't know that :/ Thanks your answer :)
Yes, you can always move back to the original tempo. You just cannot adjust one track to a different bpm while mixing with another track at the same time - that would be too difficult.
Yes, I know that :) Thanks for your answer! :)
@@SoundofArman is there any specific technique to "push the tempo" up?
Yes, just slowly using the pitch fader - not more than .5 of a BPM at a time, so that people don't notice. @@fagocitotico
Don't slow the 130BPM track to 128. slowly speed the 128BPM track up. Slowing a track down is noticeable.
Its called layering
thanks man!
dope
hi