Just about to listen.
A heads up, always post remixes or snippets in Soundcloud or the Soundcloud dropbox, makes life a lot easier! Also, try to upload non-professional tracks as MP3s. WAVs are industry standard but for a quick listen on the internet an MP3 will be fine.
Oh lord, did you record this on your phone? D: You can record your soundcard using Audacity or whatever, which is of course, better quality!
Secondly, just speeding up a track isn't really a great start to a mashup - especially when you then speed it up
again halfway through the intro. The song you are mixing into is a different tempo and key to the original, too. This is something important to look for when mixing.
If you want two good songs to mix, always ensure that they are of the same tempo or key (or similar - so you can speed it up/slow it down to match.)
When you've found two good songs, try crossing them over and
undermixing. This is when you leave both tracks playing at the same time, but at the same beat, tempo and key. Sometimes this can work wonders.
You can listen to one of my very first dubstep mixes here, I was a noob too back then but there are still things to look out for (There's a nice crossover at about 2:40 if I do say so myself):
http://soundcloud.com/tprezzle/10-minute-dubstep-mix Of course, don't take this as offence, I'm helping you out <object class="emojione" data="
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