You'd think that based on pitch, you would change the key of a track. I.e. if you have a track in Bflat, and you pitch it up +8 it is no longer a Bflat (or is it?). I would think that changing the pitch not only chages the key, but also distorts it? Any thoughts?

Cheers!
Dennis


From: "Cyclone Wehner" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: 313 Detroit <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [313] DJ Mixing - keys -
Date: Tue, 17 Apr 2001 05:12:35 +1000

Yes, Anthony Pappa does - and catalogues it as such. Like, great
recommendation. :)


>Do any Djs keep a list of "keys" of various tracks (as well as BPM)?
>("key" as in F or Bflat etc. - the tonal center of a track or whatever
>you choose to call it)
>
>If so:
>What are the most frequently used keys?
>What are the least frequently used keys?
>Do certain producers have "favorite" keys?
>What's the BMP limitation on changing tracks with different keys?
>Like if you're going from F to G (Maj 2nd up), What does that amount to in >BPM change if the F track is BPM=120 and the G track is BPM = "x"? Anybody
>work with stuff like that?

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