And add to that in the background the original song still plays while you still doing you are slicing so that you will never lose the original timing of the track itself. Is that it takes a section of the song from as long as 16 beats to as little as 2 beats and slices that section into 8 different parts which you can then trigger in any order you want and you can also set how quickly it will retrigger a slice from as slow as 1 beat to as fast as 1/8th of a beat. So just a review of what the slicer does. Now this is really a unique feature to the Serato DJ., and I kind-of liken it to a more advance lubberly, function. Retriggers it to a quarter note right now. And it takes a different selection of the track that is now being sliced. And here we go switching back into normal mode, non-loop mode. But this is one of those things you just got to get your hands on and you will really understand it right away once you get it all loaded-up. Forgive me if everything seems to be going a little bit fast right now. So I am just going to go and play around with different slices in this section adjusting the retrigger rate and even the length of the actual loop itself. Like right now I just went from 16 beats to 8 beats as well as adjusting the retrigger rate. And in either mode you can select the length of section that is being sliced. And the play head will just keep playing and cycling through that section. If you want the song to stay on a particular section you can turn on the loop function and you will see it turns blue now indication you are the in the loop mode of the slicer.
Now the current mode of the slicer I am in the song keeps progressing down the track picking new sections to slice-up.
Now right now I am adjusting the length of the retrigger when I press the slice you can set it to be as slow as 1 beat, to a half beat, to a quarter beat and an eighth of a beat as well. Now you can play these slices in any order that you want, creating interesting new rhythms and combinations. Now what the slicer does is take a section of your song and divides it into 8 different slices, which you can trigger at will, while the song itself continues playing in the background. So the way you do that is you want to open up Serato remote on your IPad and to the slicer tab.
Alright now once your grid is set, we can now engage the slicer function. Keep in mind you can fine tune the grid if the automatic grid detection does not quite work to your liking. And it will automatically set the beat grid to your track. Now the quick way to do that is to turn on the add-a-grid function and then find the first downbeat of the track and once you find that click on set. So the first thing you want to do before you use this feature is, you would want to make sure your grid is set properly. Up until real recently it was only available in certain specific hardware, but they just opened it up Serato Remote which is an App for the IPhone and the IPad Mini, so a lot more people now have access to this.
For those who are audio impaired, here’s a full text transcript of the lesson: In this tutorial we are going to go over the slicer feature in Serato DJ.