yeah but youre missing the point bruv.Phase Ghost wrote:The tempo is going to be changed by dj's anyways, so why worry about it? I dj at 120 to 121 bpm, so I'd pitch your track down quite a bit (possibly all the way down) to mix it into a set.
most of us record our tracks at specific tempos, personally i usually record at 126, 128 and 130, and we also usually record in a chromatic key with concert pitch of A= 440 Hz, because our sequencers, synths etc. push us in that direction.
its also quite common for specific types of music to stick with regular tempos, dubstep used to be nearly always 140 bpm, much minimal was 126, house 120 etc etc.
also certain keys are much more common than others, E, G, D, etc so as a DJ i often used to find that tracks in a certain genre would mix well, even if the key was different, as long as it wasnt just a semitone or a tritone out,
but if you record at 126.277 bpm, your tune will never be in tune with anything.
take my word for it, because it's a problem for me.
my own stuff mixes together really well though.