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Re: anyone else hate it when dj's insist on ruining track by scratching and efx overkill?
| quote: | Originally posted by richg101
is it just me? or does anyone else find scratching and annoying overuse of efx buttons a bit anoying in a club?
i have always thought that scratching was something that should be kept within the hip/hop dj world.. where bpms often used to flutter due to live percussion and the human aspect of its production..
why is it that so many people love that whole scratching deal? if a dj is playing a nice track, the last thing i want to hear is a bloddy scratching noise over the top ruining how the track was meant to sound..
its almost like the dj has to do this to make him look like he/she is doing somthing.. but i think it is the dj's role to chose the right tunes and mix them smoothly. and nowadays it is becoming more and more important to be playing your own music. if i see a dj like fred baker i look forward to high energy sets with clean mixing and often exclusive tracks he has made for his sets..
this type of dj far outweighs the skills of 'organ donors' and other 'circus' dj's..
i await the flaming and look forward to hearing others views |
After listening to some of your tracks on your website, I have a feeling the reason you don't like scratching is because the type of electronic music you listen to/produce/prefer isn't meant to be scratched over.
Now, I'm not saying there's any particular type of electronic music that is inherently made for scratching but some does sound better than others. House, electro, breaks, and some techy genres, for example, are much more appropriate than trance or tech trance. Songs of the former genres have beat structures, tempos, and sequencing that all work together to create stretches in the tracks that just beg for a little scratch action. Also, these tracks generally have much more subdued melodies than trancey stuff so you don't get clashing between the melody and the scratch which always sounds like crap. This is probably what you would consider "ruining how the track was meant to sound."
You should really check out some of Zabiela's earlier stuff - 2002 or 2003 - when he used to do pretty simple, well timed scratches. He doesn't scratch as much these days but is still a good example of what scratching can add to an edm set.
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