yep. shuffles can on some occasions lead to 2 tunes being almost incompatible if say, one track is swinging one way and the other one, the other, leaves you for a teensy margin in which to keep the tracks in time. learning swing/ shuffle , structure (ie counting bars in and knowing where breakdowns are) and keys (harmonic mixing) is half the battle to good mixing.Basic A wrote::Started with same tempo tracks so you could get used to the idea of conflicting shuffles n shit you cant help, right?
example - this is the reason Guidos tunes mix together with each other so beautifully, because he has built them with different chords within the same keys -- so the instruments in the tracks harmonize.
true, but not sure if maths is the best advice, if u get me. If i was the teacher I'd say learn tempo until you can judge bpm in your head with your own ears. finding the first beat of the first bar or wherever you want to cue from is essential as well, for phrasing, and then probably (if i was still in teacher mode) I'd make my pupil put on a blindfold , phones on , one handf on wheel one on pitch lol actually tht sounds a bit wrongThatll take a while yo, learning a 'rule of thumb' formula helps too, for instance 140 + 1% = 142... helped me think in proporton, it because touchier the faster you speed up or slow down...
also good headphones are an advantage, as when you heave more detail it leaves your brain less work of distinguishing where the peaks of the , say hi hats/kick/snare whatever element of the tune like you prefer to focus on to match up.
perhaps not something to write in the bible, lol, but Imo its like riding a bike we could write essays about it but its just one of them thangs ya gotta do over time