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| quote: | Originally posted by SYSTEM-J
What, but you can't change key over the course of several tracks? Not only can you move up or down the circle of fifths with a conventional transition, modern technology also allows you to change the key of a record while locking tempo.
Your argument is fucking stupid. A big part of DJing is melding tracks seamlessly to create a larger musical journey that locks people in the groove for hours. You can tell when a transition is happening because new melodies and sounds will enter the mix. You're advocating playing out of key so people hear the transition and have a sense of anticipation? Why not just trainwreck so they know it's coming? Both snap you out of your groove and sound fucking horrible.
Jumping semi-tones, or going from minor to major, can be effective, just like big jumps in tempo. Even dissonance has its uses - I've deliberately mixed out of key for effect before. But these moments should be used very sparingly or they will quickly become tiresome and gimmicky. The more I see you post, the more I become convinced you deliberately spout faux-controversial stupidity just to get people to pay attention to your posts. |
your argument was that bpm and key are similar. They aren't. You can change bpm discretely , you can't jump even a quarter tone without most people noticing. Your analogy was bad. That is all. I"m not really sure why you are explaining the concept of going to different key regions. That is how I prescribed one should use harmonic mixing in the first place, secondly, having a dj trying to explain theory to me is somewhat insulting. Trust me, there is nothing you could say regarding music that I either don't already know or could tell you why you are wrong.
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Last edited by Looney4Clooney on Sep-21-2011 at 01:40
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