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well, it depends. i was once given only 70mins to spin live, so i decided to sort of preprogram it a bit, and came up with a tracklist. ended up followuing it to the letter because it was flowing beutifully. but that's been the only time. i normally know what sort of tracks i'll play at the begin, what tracks i might throw at peak time, and what towards the end, but thats just a general notion.
its good to KNOW your tracks. know them and know them well. that will help you when spinning. it will:
a) help you select what the first record to mix in will be, in case the DJ before you isn't the same genre as you. that way, you can either blend something that will make the mix go smoothly, or mix something in that is attention grabbing and different, without clashing.
b) it will help you know when is a great moment for a certain track. when the vibe goes in a certain direction, something just clicks and tells you to play that record now.
c) if the crowd isn't digging it, it helps you pick something else that might be their cup of tea.
d) it just helps you create great mixes, where you know what is the best record to play next.
other than that, i almost always have a great opener or closer in mind. since i spin a big messy melange of genres, shit just flows. i'll be in some chilled minimal house, and suddenly go to acid techno. the key is finding that flow, that even when you did a mix of genres that sounds ludicrous in theory, sounded great in practice and the crowd loved it.
lee burridge, to name one, is great at this. he'll be hitting you with prog house, switch to some craaazy electro, switch to some dark tribalish tech house, and then to some deep and melodic tune, and you won't know what hit you at all.
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check out my guest mix for OndaSonora Podcast (aug.2009)
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