Subject:Beatmixing with Acid - a suggestion to Sonic Foundry
Posted by: thebaz
Date:9/21/2000 12:37:00 PM
A request for easier beat mixing with ACID After a quite considerable search I found Acid is the least inconvenient program to create a beat sync mix of several songs because it has the ability to adjusts the BPM automaticaly. It is however still pretty cumbersome to do and it could be so much easier. I take the effort to write this down hoping Sonic Foundry will come up with a product to facilate this. Here's how I mix two tracks now: I load them in CoolEdit and determine the BPM of each track as accurate as possible (124.67 and 126.18 BPM). Then I place both tracks in ACID and determine the 1-beat at the end of the first track where the second track should start and position a 1-beat of the second track under it. After a number of bars the beats become out of sync which I solve by tweaking the BPM of either of the songs until the beats remain in sync for long enough to do the cross fade. The result is pretty good but it is very time consuming. Besides one can never determine/specify the BPM accurate enough to make the songs stay in sync for a longer periode of time, especialy if the songs have live drums. What I'd love to have is this: I load a track in SoundForge and mark a 2 and 4-beat (in dance these are usualy very easy to visualy spot as spikes in the waveform). SoundForge now calculates the BPM of the track (BPM = 2*44khz/no_samples_between_markers) and stores the BPM value together with the location of the first 1-beat to a tiny file. Now I can drag a track in Acid under the end of the previous track and ACID can easily synchronise the 1-beat and tempo automaticaly using the BPM and timing info from the tiny file. Now I still have the problem the two tracks become out of sync when they are played simulatenously for a longer periode of time. This can be easily solved by allowing the user to add a couple of additional markers in SoundForge. If the bars and beats are displayed on the horizontal scale in SoundForge one can just add a new marker at the first beat for which the waveform deviates from the scale. I'm a programmer and if I had the sources for your wonderfull two programs I'd write the above myself. It does not seem like a very difficult job and the tough part, placing markers in the waves and adjusting beat and pitch, has been done already. With this facility added one could even mix two tracks live as a DJ does, without any beat-mixing skills. Perhaps an idea for a new product? Kind regards thebaz PS. Posted to the messageboard and mailed. If somebody from Sonic Foundry comments on this more than two weeks after my post on the messageboard I'd appreciate a copy by mail. |
Subject:Re: Beatmixing with Acid - a suggestion to Sonic Foundry
Reply by: Fidel
Date:10/1/2000 7:11:00 AM
As much as I am for new products from SF, I have to ask why you want this. If it's so this product could be sold to people who cant beatmatch themselves and want to make a demo cd so they can get gigs this is lame. Very lame. If you cant beatmatch yourself and you want to play out, I dont want to listen to you. If you want to sell fake mixes to record labels I wouldn't want to buy them. Are you trying to take the soul out of an artform in it's infancy? Wannabe DJ's who cant mix are LAME LAME LAME!!! Oh yes and the term is indeed beatmatch. thebaz wrote: >>A request for easier beat mixing with ACID >> >>After a quite considerable search I found Acid is the least >>inconvenient program to create a beat sync mix of several >>songs because it has the ability to adjusts the BPM >>automaticaly. It is however still pretty cumbersome to do >>and it could be so much easier. I take the effort to write >>this down hoping Sonic Foundry will come up with a product >>to facilate this. |
Subject:Re: Beatmixing with Acid - a suggestion to Sonic Foundry
Reply by: FoKuS
Date:10/3/2000 11:17:00 AM
Hello, I agree, if the person is selling these cds as a "mixed" cd that would be lame. I am a DJ in Austin, and I am just getting ready to make a "produced" cd just so I can give it to the girls in the club and so forth just so they can hear the music. My girlfriend wanted an all vocal cd, so I am going to use acid to do this. I have been djing for about a year and I have mixed a couple cds that I have put out, but they aren't perfect. So, I do agree if they are selling them as promos then that is bogus, but if they are just doing it for fun, then oh well. What about the people that don't know how to beatmatch and would still like to make a mixed cd. Fidel wrote: >>As much as I am for new products from SF, I have to ask why you want >>this. If it's so this product could be sold to people who cant >>beatmatch themselves and want to make a demo cd so they can get gigs >>this is lame. Very lame. If you cant beatmatch yourself and you want >>to play out, I dont want to listen to you. If you want to sell fake >>mixes to record labels I wouldn't want to buy them. Are you trying to >>take the soul out of an artform in it's infancy? >>Wannabe DJ's who cant mix are LAME LAME LAME!!! >>Oh yes and the term is indeed beatmatch. >> >>thebaz wrote: >>>>A request for easier beat mixing with ACID >>>> >>>>After a quite considerable search I found Acid is the least >>>>inconvenient program to create a beat sync mix of several >>>>songs because it has the ability to adjusts the BPM >>>>automaticaly. It is however still pretty cumbersome to do >>>>and it could be so much easier. I take the effort to write >>>>this down hoping Sonic Foundry will come up with a product >>>>to facilate this. |
Subject:Re: Beatmixing with Acid - a suggestion to Sonic Foundry
Date:10/8/2000 5:15:00 PM
Fidel wrote: >> people who cant beatmatch themselves and want to make a demo >> cd so they can get gigs Such a DJ would only have a single gig and after that his/her reputation would be set. >>If you want to sell fake mixes to record labels I wouldn't >>want to buy them. It's just nice to make compilations which have no pauses in between the tracks. I have no intention of selling mixes or pretending to be a DJ myself. >> Are you trying to take the soul out of an artform in it's >> infancy? IMHO it's the inspiration of the artist/musician/DJ which counts. Not the tools he uses. People objected against drum machines as well and I think those have made a great contribution to music. So have sequencers and samplers. To play out I don't think anyone would want to use a piece of software like this. One probably would not want to use a computer at all. Nor music stored on harddrive. You tell me. To create mixes or new pieces of music out of samples and loops I think such software would be great. Even if you are an excellent DJ it's extremely difficult to mix two wave files using a mouse and a keyboard. So you imagine what you want to accomplish but can not do it because the controls are to clumbsy. *If* you are using software to work with music it would be nice if the software is as versatile as possible. >>Wannabe DJ's who cant mix are LAME LAME LAME!!! Relax. There is no need to feel threadend since there's more to being a DJ then getting the beat synchronised. You think mixing should be done only by people who have the skills to beatmatch using turntables, because the practise it takes to get that skill, filters out the people which have no taste or are not truelly motivated? IMHO it makes little difference. There's already plenty of radiostations with propperly beatmatched but totally uninspired broadcasts. And a good club will never leave a robot or a pc-aided amateur in charge of the dancefloor. thebaz PS >>Oh yes and the term is indeed beatmatch. Thanks. I'm dutch and what I know about DJ-ing is what I hear and see when I go out. |