unless your track was ripped from a ghetto record player
(as a lot of the tracks I DJ in traktor are :( then you
should not have to adjust the track a lot.

keep in mind most production is taking place in a
sequencer, be it hardware or computer, so the timing of
most of the newer tracks is pretty consistant, save
post-bounce edits, which SUCK when they throw the trakc off
beat by half a bar or whatever.

typically you can set a warp marker at the beginning and
end of the track (or selection) and pull one or the other
and line up the markers in between to the tracks
transients, if its a 4/4 dancey track.

hope this makes sens,e im flash-emailing at work :)

-Joe

On 24-jan-04, at 2:23, Quest Pond wrote:

>use both audo no midi
>play virtual instrument plugins

Ableton is a rewire master and slave application AFAIK so
you could play it along with your favorite sequencer...


>I dont know who has time to put markers on all mp3 tracks
especally 
>with the
>clumbsy marker controls in ableton, not me.
>
>Quest Pond
>
>-----Original Message-----
>From: Ronny Pries [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>Sent: Friday, 23 January 2004 2:07 PM
>To: '313'
>Subject: RE: (313) Ableton Live mixes
>
>
>i discovered ableton live a few days ago and have started
to chop my
>vinyls into handy loops. it's really sick work but on the
other hand i
>can't wait to add this to my vinyl/fs set.
>
>as far as i got it, most of you use ableton to play entire
tracks with
>it? uhm, i can't open any mp3's here, you guys have got
too much hd
>space for all the .wavs or ??? am i too dumb?
>
>cheers,
>ronny
>

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