The Cue Point I Forgot

Practice only compounds if you remember what you learned.

I DJ. Not professionally anymore—those days are behind me—but the craft never left.

There's something about beatmatching, about scratching, about that moment when two tracks lock together and the room responds, that I've never found anywhere else. Even now, pushing 50, I practice in my bedroom at midnight when my daughter's asleep. Old habits.

But here's the thing about practicing alone: nobody remembers what you learned.


I'd sit down with a track I was sure I knew. Put a cue point on the drop. Start a routine. Get it tight. Feel good about it.

Then I'd come back a week later and the cue point would be gone. Or I'd be using different software. Or I'd just... forget. Where was that break? Which eight bars had the sample I liked? What was the routine I was working on?

Practice is supposed to compound. Each session builds on the last. But my practice kept resetting. I was learning the same things over and over, never quite progressing.


Cut Creator is my answer to this.

Persistent cue-point storage that syncs across platforms. Practice session logging—what you worked on, for how long. Track notes that stay with the file. A routine builder for sequencing drills.

It's not a replacement for Serato or Rekordbox. It's a second brain that sits alongside them. So when you come back to a track, you remember what you knew.


Right now, it's founders only. A small group of DJs I know personally, testing the core ideas.

If you're a DJ who practices alone and wants your practice to actually accumulate, reach out. I'm not selling anything yet. I'm just looking for people who understand the problem.