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-- playing lots of old tracks bad?
playing lots of old tracks bad?
I'm obviously new to all of this. The only skill I have mastered is beat matching.
Anyways...I was wondering if its considered bad to lay down a set comprised of mostly old and/or classic tracks?
Also wondering what is the best way to get a local gig? When you are trying to get gigs...I mean...there aren't like tryouts or anything. How do clubs know what kind of talent you have?
Re: playing lots of old tracks bad?
| quote: |
| Originally posted by xstalkrx I'm obviously new to all of this. The only skill I have mastered is beat matching. Anyways...I was wondering if its considered bad to lay down a set comprised of mostly old and/or classic tracks? Also wondering what is the best way to get a local gig? When you are trying to get gigs...I mean...there aren't like tryouts or anything. How do clubs know what kind of talent you have? |
An old wise man, told me once... It's not the size mate, it's how you use it!
Hope it helps
What about playing lots of old tracks that aren't "anthems" or well known? Is that frowned upon or do you think that would be OK?
Most of the trance releases these days are pretty poor and the quality was a lot higher in the early to mid 90s in my opinion.
| quote: |
| Originally posted by A.J. What about playing lots of old tracks that aren't "anthems" or well known? Is that frowned upon or do you think that would be OK? Most of the trance releases these days are pretty poor and the quality was a lot higher in the early to mid 90s in my opinion. |
| quote: |
| Originally posted by IKKI-ZUVK An old wise man, told me once... It's not the size mate, it's how you use it! Hope it helps |
well i cant always afford to keep up with the new shit...
so i just buy what i think is good.... and if its new then cool... and if not then oh well
its something i really like, so to me it dosnt matter 
It doesn't matter to me either. There are really old records i try to include in my sets from the 50s or so for mood. I also find older electro and electronic albums to have some depth that newer stuff is lacking. I personally like to try and record a set that tells a story or seems to have purpose. To me that makes it much harder and more rewarding than to beat match two simular records and mix those together. My goal is to sound different.
any old tune can be played, fi you create a right oment for it. however, some tunes... well, the only way you can play em is if everything else in your set is brand new, asskicking, amazing mixing, then maybe the crowd will forgive the classic.
personally, i HATE it when someone plays stuff EVERYONE had heard, and is old. it's like you're telling me that i don't know shit and have been lving under a rock for the past years, so you might as well give me a tour of what's been banging.
playing old tunes that almost got no play is the way to go. i do this a lot. i could play hours of 2003-2004 shit and no one would notice, because they were records no one heard.
getting gigs, well, it has been beaten to death in this forum, just search around man.
Old tunes are great. Especially if you're spinning trance.
depends if its tunes that have been hammered to death or ones that few people have heard yet are older, big difference in my opinion.
i like old tracks but whats even cooler is hearing an old tune thats been remixed now, doesnt happen often really but in the instance of fancy fair 2005 
Well the best thing in my opinion is to play a variety of old and new. If you play all new stuff, people might not know the tunes your playing. If you play too many old stuff, then it gets boring after a while and people wont be able to hear new stuff and find the tune afterwards and think "this is what he or she played that night at the club..". Mixing it up a bit is good to me, and lots of big DJs play old stuff and new stuff.
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