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You have two aspects : djing and producing.
When you dj, you spin already produced tracks.
When you produce, you make your own tracks out of separate elements.
Remixing is to be placed under producing. As you get several elements and you make your own tune (a remix is nothing else than a composition that can stand on its own, but that is based on an existing composition).
You can get a midi file, but you can start over from scratch also (that's done a lot also you know, even more than starting from midified tunes imo). For a tune to be called a remix it has to have elements from an existing tune. That can be (part of) melody, samples, progression, ...
Some remixes are so "original" that you have a hard time finding out it's based on another tune...
PS : the opposite is true also, some so called "original" tunes are so unoriginal you'd think they are a remix of something else.
What you are doing with the TT's and EQ's is merely altering the sound of an existing tune, not remixing...
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