Sometimes, you just want to use the original song, sometimes you want to make a very long transition, so you can store a tweak with a very extended intro, sometimes, when you do a mix for lovely little children you want a tweak of the song where you reversed all the filthy swearing words and cut out obscene lyrics.:PYou can even assign a tweak as a default, and select the others only when you need them. This way(because it's possible to save multiple Tweaks per track, and give each their own name) you can store multiple 'edits' of the same track, while all reading from the same original audiofile.This can be handy when you use the same track in different situations. Volume markers, in/out markers and even the parts you cut and pasted(extended intros, or cut out ugly chorus parts, or even rearrangements). Tweaks aren't meant for this, so this should be in no way a failing, like you wrote.Tweaks however store everything you changed on the song, i.e.
Bring on the lunch break so I can sink my teeth into this!Ī correction for Yorick about the 'Track Tweaks':MixMeister automatically saves your beatgrid adjustments. Especially liking the track-based sub-headings. It sounds so wonderfully enticing.Yorick - nice work.
I need to fix my shit in the real world, not rely on fancy schmancy (but oh so cool) software to do it for me.and yet. There was also red wine involved, so it was also just a bit sloppy all round.I'm almost too scared to read this review. Nice.Giz, youre introduction here is spot on.I just tried recording a live mix for the first time over the weekend. The things that can be done in MixMeister makes the old methods look prehistoric, and if I were in the market to knock out mixtapes, MixMeister would probably be at the top of my shopping list.Yorick also has MixMeister Control under the skratchworx review microscope - a review will appear soon.In the meantime, check out Yorick's. In the short time I played with it, I realised that making mixtapes just became a doodle - more about creative production than doing your best to nail 60 minutes in one take.
Yorick stops short of becoming a VJ and plumps for the Fusion edition.I have some experience of MixMeister, having written an overview for the Numark digital magazine a couple of years ago.
Yorick reluctantly agreed to take it on, and ended up falling in love.There are 4 versions to choose from, each giving you an increasingly powerful arsenal, from basic mixing with effects all the way up to full on live perfomance mixing with video - all matched with the specially tailored MixMeister Control hardware. One such luxury is - a tool that is absolutely perfect for mistape creation. These days however, all you bloody so called DJs are spoonfed with every possible luxury to make your life easier. You had to make tough decisions on the fly about whether your screwups were OK to leave in the mix or if you had to start all over again. Back in the olden days, before computers were even thought of for music, we old timers had to record mixes in one go.