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| quote: | Originally posted by Zak McKracken
are you really known for it 
the entire purpose of a remix is make something very different with the parts, no need to know the original structure.
you may not use the melody or anything, just a hook sample / voice or whatever. you can even change up the chords to fit whatever part you use to focus on in a new way. im known to be very good at this |
I dunno if I agree with that.
Sometimes, a remix can be anything. You can pull a Timo Mass and come up with a completely different track that bares fuck resemblance to the original, or you can pull a Mat Darey and make a similar track to the original but add you signature thumping sound with rolling/sweeping 16th note basslines and leadlines, or you can just spice up the original.
In my mind, it's a remix, not a re-compose, so I think the true essence is to make a better(in your vision) version of the original....but it's just that; a version of the original. making something completely "new" and disparate from the original in my mind isn't really a remix as such.
Sometimes, the biggest urge to do a remix comes from the fact I hear a that could have greatness, but just misses the mark. Maybe I'm more an engineer than a composer when it comes to producing, but so often the stuff that motivates me are those near misses where I can instantly hear what they "should" have done and how I'd do it.
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