Teach your cat this:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=J---aiyznGQ
I learned today that you shouldn't plan a party if you have no clue how that goes.
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Teach your cat this:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=J---aiyznGQ
I learned today that you shouldn't plan a party if you have no clue how that goes.
A longer upfader allows for a more subtler blending that lets you play two tracks and multiple decks together for a longer time.
I use a combo.
I use the fader for cuts.
Buy usually use the up faders,....I find it blends better without dipping sound etc.
Some X Faders are trashy.
-agreed. When I was first starting out, I made the mistake of attempting to mix in a track with the X-fader to one side. That prompted me to leave the X fader centered and just mix with the up faders. Only recently have I begun incorporating both back into my mixing. :cool:
Nope....not at all.
if you not taking your VCI with you and you have to use the house mixer (which I have been doing since about a year or more ago), sometimes the xFader is fucked....or whatever. So I just started using the upfaders and it has stuck.
There are a few settings for XFaders....sometimes on shitty mixers...when you have the fader in the middle....it makes the volume less so it does not redline.
I use my EQ and gains....so ....
For me the line faders vs X-fader is a choice of independent control over linked control. With the line fader, I choose what is happening independently with each channel. With the X-fader, you work on a software or hardware mixing curve that may not always suit the mix.
For me: Long mixes + line faders, chops/radio fades = x-fader
But it is really a preference thing.
Phil.