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| quote: | Originally posted by First Strike
also quickley playing the sample in reverse and then foward on a normal turntable cant be done.... |
that can be achieved by hand, if done correctly. btw, Zabiela rarely does the "crazy spin", he was just smackin' the jogwheel backwards to make a point that it would not skip. in effect, it was a backspin, which you can do quite easily with vinyl.
the things you can't do with a normal deck that Zabiela does with the CDJ when it's time to pull out the turntablism tricks are: start/brake adjustment, use of 100% pitch, use of master tempo, and the facility of a cue point at the touch of a button.
with the EFX, DJM600, a locked groove with a sample, you could basically do almost every single thing he does, on vinyl.
which brings me to a question. i have a hip hop track. i have another hip hop track. i have a battle record with a locked groove i'm gonna use to scratch with. that's 3. which explains why Zabiela demands 3 decks. but why have all battle setups i've seen always consist of just 2 decks? (granted, i haven't looked at that many turntablism videos)
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