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It seems to me that your problem has many facets.
First off, the crowd are the ones who aren't dancing, so that means that there aren't any really experienced dancers in the crowd because otherwise, they would be dancing during the breaks! This is a part of djing that you have to learn--reading the crowd. If you realize that all the people are leaving the floor because they can't dance to part of your track, then either don't play that track, or "fix" the track so they can dance to it.
As far as Lange - Follow Me goes, that track in particular has a very long break (about 60-90 seconds on the two mixes that I had listen to just now). This is a pretty long break, you have to admit, so when you spin this track, either 1. eliminate the long break by adding your own beat from another track. If you can do it fast enough, use the next track you want to spin so you can do a teaser of that track. Or if you can't do it fast enough, then start the last track over again and use the first 30-60 seconds of that track as your beat so that your break is now quite a bit shorter. Then after your first major break you can start cueing up the next track. Or you can find a better mix of that track. 2. you can use that break to your advantage. If you've ever listened to a PVD set, then go back and listen to it again and see how many breaks he has. Usually there are a couple about 1/3 and 2/3's into the set and then one long break on either his last or second to last track. If you listen to the crowd, they go fucking ape shit when he puts that long break in the end. Lots of other djs do that too! I've heard Tiesto stop the track and then release after he counts x number of beats in his head--and it's always after the crowd goes ape shit! They do this because they have been dancing for the last 90 mins and they NEED a break! They are having such a good time that they don't want to leave the dancefloor and this is what you have to give YOUR crowd!
In short, be cautious when and where in your set you use breaks that are more than 10-15 seconds. I don't care how much you like the track, if it kills the momentum of your set, then don't use it! It may be YOUR fav. track, but I'd put money down that it's not your crowd's fav. track. As for me, I only buy music that I personally like, and then I descide what portion of that is suitable to spin live. If my whole collection is music that I like, then anything that I spin from that, I will like. If my crowd "requests" (by not dancing) that I don't spin certain tracks, then I'll spin others that I like!
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