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| quote: | Originally posted by GUBostonDubs
That's why I don't pitch up or down too far at all. It's about what elements make up the track and the energy contained within them. You find me 10 tracks all at 130 bpms set at 0 on the pitch control and I would try to place them in the order of their energy level to build up the set if I wanted to keep increasing the energy all the way through the set or bring down the energy. This is what djs like Danny Howells, Sasha, and Digweed often do. Howells for example in a 10 hour set at pawn shop in miami I doubt changed the bpm the entire night yet created many peaks and valleys due to the energy levels of the tracks themselves. That's advanced level djing stuff and something I'm hoping to eventually master at some point. |
Cool, I understand, because I keep the same BPM for like 3 or 4 tracks in some my mixes, and I know sometimes i've almost kept the same BPM throughout, like last night, so I know what your talking about. I guess it's just a miconceptation that higher BPM = more energy, but I think if your only doing an hour or two you should probably increase it, vs. a 4 hour to 10 hour set where you have more time to play a variety of stuff, and besides you could go into such huge BPM levels by doing that over 4 hours. So thanks for clearing this up, didn't mean to make it sound like a debate.
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