what is he/she actually doing? i just started listening to this type of music and when looking at set lists, i see that they just play a lot of other peoples songs. i know he has to transition between songs since they use different discs, but do they do anything else during the songs? i just got back from ibiza and i really liked the music they were playing the clubs, so i'm just trying to learn a little bit about what goes on.
Aug-15-2005 18:53
Floorfiller
Girl + Sweater = Hotness
Registered: Apr 2002
Location: Illegal Pete's
well what you got already is the basic idea. dj's simply transition between songs...but then they can also add different effects or edit the music live...lots of things you can do...
Aug-15-2005 19:32
foreveranuj
Senior tranceaddict
Registered: Jul 2005
Location: Boston, MA
Lot of things...
Lot of things actually - varies from DJ to DJ. There are scratches, mutes, announcements, pep-up-the-crowd, and Music, of course.
DJing looks jazzy - but I can tell you, it aint easy. You have a new(different) crowd to pep up everyday.
Regards
Anuj
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The Trance Hub
Aug-15-2005 19:32
UWM
mandroid
Registered: Mar 2001
Location: Here
You must make a Jesus pose to be a true DJ.
Aug-15-2005 19:48
DOOMBOT
Supreme tranceaddict
Registered: Sep 2004
Location:
quote:
Originally posted by UWM
You must make a Jesus pose to be a true DJ.
Even that takes years of practice!
Aug-15-2005 19:50
basd
progression
Registered: Jul 2002
Location: Somewhere nowhere
quote:
Originally posted by UWM
You must make a Jesus pose to be a true DJ.
Yup, DJ = Doing tha Jesus.
As opposed to a producer, which equals Pirating Reason Obviously Does Ultimately Create Extraordinary Rubbish.
Originally posted by basd
Yup, DJ = Doing tha Jesus.
As opposed to a producer, which equals Pirating Reason Obviously Does Ultimately Create Extraordinary Rubbish.
True dat! I sift through so much crap when browsing Beatport and EDMDigital!
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Aug-15-2005 20:52
torontotrance
I hath returned
Registered: Apr 2001
Location: Toronto
The better deejays imo tailor their sets to the country and crowd they play. Seems lots of progressive deejays, when they play toronto, play hard and the crowds seem to love it, cept Lavelle's last performance, GU026 minus a song
Aug-15-2005 21:36
NuDarkBeat
Supreme tranceaddict
Registered: Sep 2003
Location: Miami , FL , USA
LOL at the Jesus pose. Armin and Ferry should be lynched for this
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Aug-15-2005 22:42
Clovis
techno jungle shit
Registered: Apr 2004
Location: Los Angeles
quote:
Originally posted by torontotrance
The better deejays imo tailor their sets to the country and crowd they play. Seems lots of progressive deejays, when they play toronto, play hard and the crowds seem to love it, cept Lavelle's last performance, GU026 minus a song
I think some of the best DJ's are those who can find a sound that fits the atmosphere of the venue/club/event...
Lawler/Sasha nailed it here in LA at Avalon...
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quote:
Originally posted by ********
Seplling don't demonstrate intelligence and educatoin - knowing does.
Aug-15-2005 23:30
iammesol
Burnt out and grown up
Registered: Mar 2004
Location: Atlanta, USA
quote:
Originally posted by basd
Yup, DJ = Doing tha Jesus.
As opposed to a producer, which equals Pirating Reason Obviously Does Ultimately Create Extraordinary Rubbish.
roflmfao
Aug-15-2005 23:44
Zombie0729
Supreme tranceaddict
Registered: Oct 2003
Location: .
quote:
Originally posted by torontotrance
The better deejays imo tailor their sets to the country and crowd they play. Seems lots of progressive deejays, when they play toronto, play hard and the crowds seem to love it, cept Lavelle's last performance, GU026 minus a song
i really hear both sides of this. i'm indifferent but i hear a lot of people and promoters complain when a prog DJ comes in and plays slower and deeper because thats what the town/city is known for(boston, san diego, etc). most promoters feel they bring in that DJ to spread a different sound to the city.
Then i hear DJ's talk all the time that it can take 5 or 6 tracks before they can really understand where the crowd is coming from.
both sides make sense, who wants to bring a DJ who sounds like they've DJ'd in that city their whole life, but then again who wants a DJ who doesn't cater to the crowd?