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-- Are there any DJ's around that don't play the same genre at every gig?
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Posted by Dykes_on_Jay on Nov-05-2012 18:08:

u mad? (at dried up ovaries.)


Posted by Rodri Santos on Nov-05-2012 18:57:

quote:
Originally posted by RapidFire
pretty ridiculous to throw a blanket statement like that, then. especially if you're only talking about the mainstream aspect of the culture...one which is as formulaic in DJing as it is in any nearly every other artform.


He is right on what he says about top 40. A pc could surely do better because with his several limitations is smarter than famous top 40 jocks.

You are right that considering this djing is laughable when i think of a dj i don't imagine a big arena. It pictures in my mind a dj spinning vynils in a dark and wet small venue.

What is funny is that rather big djs like the top 50 have less twitter followers/likes on FB than most spanish local bands for example so djing is still very very underground even at the commercial level.

I find hilarious that a guy that is playing in festivals across the globe like Digweed is less followed than a band from my half a million inhabitants city that struggles to play out of the city.


Posted by sg_57 on Nov-06-2012 01:42:

Re: Are there any DJ's around that don't play the same genre at every gig?

quote:
Originally posted by Guest Which pro dj's out there have a music collection that is so deep that they can play different sub genres of EDM from week to week and still keep the fans coming back?


After seven pages, things have predictably gone way over there..

Personally I would say that I was suprised no one mentioned people like Gilles Peterson, who exactly fit the bill... Tom Middleton can also shift gears between lots of genres and remain very entertaining. Laurent Garnier as well.... There are many more that come to mind, including young'uns like Joy Orbison.


Posted by Dykes_on_Jay on Nov-06-2012 16:44:

c'est de l'or


Posted by Ishkur on Dec-18-2012 06:22:

quote:
Originally posted by Dykes_on_Jay
If the DJs all sucked, why did you keep going to events with DJs?


Cuz it's not about the DJs and never should be.


Posted by Psyshell on Dec-18-2012 06:24:

quote:
Originally posted by Ishkur
Cuz it's not about the DJs and never should be.

Obviously sometimes people goto music events for the people/vibe, but what's wrong with going to music events for good music sometimes?


Posted by Dykes_on_Jay on Dec-18-2012 06:38:

so why not just go to a college pub and make vomiting teenage women deep throat you. it's cheaper.


Posted by meriter on Dec-18-2012 06:39:

^ sage wisdom


Posted by Dykes_on_Jay on Dec-18-2012 06:42:

i agree with him to an extent though. people make the party, not the dj. that being said, why waste time and money going to events you are sick of? if i'm not working, i rarely go out. why? because i've seen enough people dancing like beaker of the muppets to last a lifetime.

a good dj can make the good party great. that is why they are still relevant.


Posted by meriter on Dec-18-2012 06:43:

if the dj isn't bringing it everything else is harder


Posted by Ishkur on Dec-18-2012 06:54:

quote:
Originally posted by SYSTEM-J
Right, so you went to Shambhala (and what a world-class line-up it looks like, I might add). I remember you once memorably berating me for lecturing on things I hadn't experienced (namely scenes in other cities). Now you're passing judgement on the entire state of DJing based on one annual excursion to some shitty second-rate Canadian music festival and probably a few podcasts (which generally have nothing to do with the art of DJing).


Well, to be fair, I have nearly 20 years experience at this while you have less than 5. All your comments, by the way, are completely insulting and unfounded.

Typical brit.

quote:
Originally posted by SYSTEM-J
Regarding this "read the crowd and tell a story" notion... I think "reading the crowd" can be over-emphasised. If you're playing peak time to a busy dancefloor and you've been correctly booked by the promoter (and especially if you're a big name DJ) you're not going to have to worry too much about losing their attention unless you get it drastically wrong.


I agree with this, If you're the headliner in 734 3d point font on the flyer scheduled to appear at peak hour, you can bash your elbows on the decks like John Lennon at Shea Stadium -- it don't matter, people will love you.

quote:
Originally posted by SYSTEM-J
Reading the crowd is most important for DJs who need to win the crowd over initially


Which is something every headliner oughta remember and not rely on to coast on their prestige and hype. Unfortunately, few seldom do that.

quote:
Originally posted by SYSTEM-J
But overall, as for the question "is a DJ actually needed anymore?", surely you're suggesting that DJs are needed more than ever?


Good DJs are definitely needed. Unfortunately, there are very few DJs who understand what that means, what that entails or what is required to facilitate that outcome.


Posted by Ishkur on Dec-18-2012 06:58:

quote:
Originally posted by SYSTEM-J
Well someone who went to the last one just told me that every DJ he saw there sucked, so you should probably be arguing with him.


They did suck, but for none of the reasons you think.


Posted by Ishkur on Dec-18-2012 07:05:

quote:
Originally posted by Psyshell
Obviously sometimes people goto music events for the people/vibe, but what's wrong with going to music events for good music sometimes?


What good music?


Posted by Psyshell on Dec-18-2012 07:08:

quote:
Originally posted by Ishkur
Well, to be fair, I have nearly 20 years experience at this while you have less than 5.

quote:
Originally posted by Ishkur
What good music?

The music you're too cynical and jaded to enjoy anymore.

There's some rather good techno, psy & drum n bass in Melbourne these days. I dunno if there is where you live. Also, how's your guide going? Is it at all? I think it'd be great if a new version was made

quote:
Originally posted by Dykes_on_Jay
i agree with him to an extent though. people make the party, not the dj. that being said, why waste time and money going to events you are sick of? if i'm not working, i rarely go out. why? because i've seen enough people dancing like beaker of the muppets to last a lifetime.

a good dj can make the good party great. that is why they are still relevant.

What makes you think all events with electronic music are like that? Maybe that's what your local scene is like but suffice to say there's plenty of music events which feel nothing like a "chicks with fake blonde hair getting drunk and dancing to house music" style clubs.


Posted by SYSTEM-J on Dec-18-2012 07:22:

quote:
Originally posted by Ishkur
Well, to be fair, I have nearly 20 years experience at this while you have less than 5. All your comments, by the way, are completely insulting and unfounded.

Typical brit.


My my, Kent complaining that people are being insulting. You must be getting old!

I'm well aware you are a lot more experienced than me (although you're certainly massaging the data with those numbers). You are well aware that you're appealing to your own authority, and that people with decades of experience can frequently painfully embarrass themselves when trying to assess the State Of The Scene. You might have too much about you to fall completely into "back in the day" stereotypes but I also know it took you about three years to hear Burial, which suggests a man whose finger slipped off the pulse sometime midway through 2005.

And really, this old Ishkur trick of making oblique statements like 'They did suck, but for none of the reasons you think' to try and regain rhetorical control of the debate before unleashing the inevitable sophist essay isn't going to cut it. I think it's perfectly fair to say the art of the DJ has been diluted due to inevitable changes in the conditions of the music scene. In fact, I've already said that in this thread. But you've done what you always do, the blockbuster-tagline attention-grabbing overstatement THE ART OF THE DJ IS DEAD, which is really just a bit silly because there are evidently hundreds of brilliant DJs young and old, famous and unknown, playing out today. And it's also pretty clear that your problem stems from the fact you don't party much anymore, you're stylistically detached from modern movements and you don't really know where to go to hear the good shit.

Because I'm right, aren't I? That's the Shambhala line-up. If you had a comprehensive list of DJs you'd seen in the last 12 months that reveal a man still vibrantly interacting with the many strands of dance music, you'd have posted it.


Posted by Psyshell on Dec-18-2012 07:29:

Excellent post system-j. Suffice to say Ishkur's not the only one around here (or in life generally) that tries to pull that line of argument either.


Posted by Dykes_on_Jay on Dec-18-2012 07:36:

quote:
Originally posted by Psyshell

What makes you think all events with electronic music are like that? Maybe that's what your local scene is like but suffice to say there's plenty of music events which feel nothing like a "chicks with fake blonde hair getting drunk and dancing to house music" style clubs.


You really are an idiot. You are a child trying to argue with someone who has been at it for a while (1996 was my first party...a big one) and gets paid to do this type of thing now. Go back to playing connect 4 with your grandma. I don't even know what you are responding to. It's why you are a bus boy.

Quit putting words in my mouth and back to putting bread baskets on tables. Some twat from buttfuck australia is trying to educate a guy from one of the best cities for all electronic music in NA. You should have a blog.


Posted by wotyzoid on Dec-18-2012 08:01:




Wow, it just got really good in here. And fuck, I knew Ishkur was old, but, sweet Jesus, he's fucking OLD.


Posted by Dykes_on_Jay on Dec-18-2012 08:14:

"fake blonde hair bla bla bla" vs "sausage party with 150+ bpm music".


Posted by Psyshell on Dec-18-2012 08:26:

quote:
Originally posted by Dykes_on_Jay
"fake blonde hair bla bla bla" vs "sausage party with 150+ bpm music".

Almost all of the music parties I goto have a higher female to male ratio than most house music clubs actually.

Again, nice try dykes on jay


Posted by wotyzoid on Dec-18-2012 08:30:

I saw Ben UFO on Saturday, Jay. Aren't I a big boy now?


Posted by LAdazeNYnights on Dec-18-2012 08:49:

quote:
Originally posted by wotyzoid



Wow, it just got really good in here. And fuck, I knew Ishkur was old, but, sweet Jesus, he's fucking OLD.


fuck yes
opcorngif:


Posted by Psyshell on Dec-18-2012 09:03:

quote:
Originally posted by wotyzoid
Wow, it just got really good in here. And fuck, I knew Ishkur was old, but, sweet Jesus, he's fucking OLD.


Them kids don't know what proper rock music is anymore

quote:
Originally posted by SYSTEM-J
And really, this old Ishkur trick of making oblique statements like 'They did suck, but for none of the reasons you think'

quote:
Originally posted by Ishkur
Well, to be fair, I have nearly 20 years experience at this while you have less than 5.


Sorry I must have meant techno


Posted by wotyzoid on Dec-18-2012 09:20:

I hope I never get that jaded and cynical. Though, I highly doubt it could ever happen to me. I was listening to techno long before the candy, sunshine, booty shaking house I listen to so often today so if anything I'm getting less cynical.


Posted by Psyshell on Dec-18-2012 09:41:

I think it just depends on the attitude you have. My input on the subject is it's easy to feel that way when your only musical experiences are downloading sets off forums and discussing it on forums. My whole view of music has totally changed since I started going out.

Even if the style of techno they play at your local clubs is way worse than the kind on these forums, so long as you enjoy musical events occasionally you'll probably never end up that way.


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