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Amateur DJs: are we too selective?
By 'amateur,' I mean DJ's who play out somewhere in between the bedroom and the main room, and if you're anything like me, you comb Beatport, live sets, and your favorite compilations for only the most indispensable material, crating the best and discarding the rest. At least, that was me. It would seem to make sense that you would shell out for only the music you were most excited about, but even a ton of music picked up this way doesn't leave you with a whole ton of options, as you still sometimes struggle to find an appropriate opener/follow-up/closer that you're either satisfied with or haven't already played to death.
Which got me to thinking: do professional DJ's truly care about most of the stuff they play, especially over the course of several hours? When I buy only the music I like the most, and assemble it into a set...yeah, I enjoy every single one of those tracks, either as builders or bombs, which is, oddly, the problem: it sounds unrealistically good. I've never listened to a compilation or a set where I was seriously into every single track. While I'm not saying that pro DJ's secretly think the bulk of their sets are crap, I doubt that they think every track they play is a winner, and must be playing material that's more serviceable than outright good.
So, should amateur DJ's lower their standards for the sake of having more music/mixing options? Should you give equal weight to music that is merely functional as you do to something you're truly passionate about?
Of course, I don't presume to project my idea of bomb vs functional on the ears of someone who see's the same music in a very different way, but I doubt they're playing only the cream of the crop of which amateur DJ's will accept nothing less.
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He traded sands for skins, skins for gold, gold for life. In the end, he traded life for sand. Afari, Tales
Last edited by Paradox Lost on May-12-2020 at 09:43
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