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MERiDiAN5i2
Supreme tranceaddict

Registered: Oct 2001
Location: Texas, USA
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nope.. it doesnt wear off, if gets stronger and stronger.
the more skills you get with vinyl, the more fun it becomes. you realize all these cool things you can do that you never thought of before, because vinyl is physical and flexible.
the more I learn, the more I love the medium.
vinyl has this little thing called accuracy - an analog pitch fader. no .1% resoltion like a CD deck.. so if you have the skills to really beatmatch, you can make your mixes stay on target alot longer.
there's also something about the waveform a good turntable cartidge generates, and the low input signal level. it's very conducive to air-tight beat matching - the smooth analog waveforms tend to blend with eachother in very pleasing fashion...
but with anything, the more control and ability to control, the more skill required. getting the feel for vinyl and really being able to work with it takes a lot of practice!
but, it's not hard. very straight forward. start/stop, pitch and 33/45. that's it.
no looping, fancy buttons, LCD displays, BPM counters, cueing controls, etc. who needs it!
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Sep-15-2003 03:39
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Yan
fauxhawk

Registered: Jul 2003
Location: Wano
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| quote: | Originally posted by MERiDiAN5i2
nope.. it doesnt wear off, if gets stronger and stronger.
the more skills you get with vinyl, the more fun it becomes. you realize all these cool things you can do that you never thought of before, because vinyl is physical and flexible.
the more I learn, the more I love the medium.
vinyl has this little thing called accuracy - an analog pitch fader. no .1% resoltion like a CD deck.. so if you have the skills to really beatmatch, you can make your mixes stay on target alot longer.
there's also something about the waveform a good turntable cartidge generates, and the low input signal level. it's very conducive to air-tight beat matching - the smooth analog waveforms tend to blend with eachother in very pleasing fashion...
but with anything, the more control and ability to control, the more skill required. getting the feel for vinyl and really being able to work with it takes a lot of practice!
but, it's not hard. very straight forward. start/stop, pitch and 33/45. that's it.
no looping, fancy buttons, LCD displays, BPM counters, cueing controls, etc. who needs it! |
Very, VERY well put. **Applauds**
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Sep-15-2003 05:16
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bent
Supreme tranceaddict
Registered: May 2003
Location: Perth
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Thanks a heap for all ur responses!
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Sep-15-2003 08:22
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Dzokayi
Supreme tranceaddict
Registered: Feb 2002
Location: Houston, Texas, USA TXTA#32
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I spin both...
And I am impartial.... certainly turntables are a bit more elegant...more like a piece of fine, minimalist industrial art - form & function in balance.
But the jabs against CD players are unwarranted and not based in fact. The Pioneer decks, for example, offer 0.02% pitch resolution, not 0.1% as stated earlier. I can let a 2 - 3 minute mix ride on CDJs, turntables, or any combination thereof - without fiddling with the fader.
I understand that some of you guys are die-hard vinyl loyalists, and that's cool, but take off the rose-colored glasses when someone comes in here asking for objective, factual information.
CDs offer a wealth of creative possibilities with looping, hot cues, etc. You can really add a LOT to your sets with a good CDJ. I'm of the 'less is more' school of thought when it comes to effects & such, but a well placed loop, vocal stab or sample can really make a track come alive.
Do I think a CDJ1000 will age as gracefully as a Technics 1200? No, it will look clunky just as the CDJ500II does now, but hey... looks aren't everything....
Anyway bent, it comes down to personal preference. If you just like handling the vinyl, go for turntables.... if mixing the music is of paramount importance - no matter the medium - you might look at CDs.
Of course, if you go for the CDJ1000, 800, or Denon's decks (or even the new Technics) you'll find that it is still a very manually intensive process: cueing up your track, rocking it back & forth to find the perfect release point, swapping discs, scratching, etc. It's very similar to handling vinyl if you want it to be. Of course you can use them as traditional CD players too and eliminate a lot of the platter manipulation.
I would say this: Grab some CDs, records, & cartridges. Go to your nearest dealer, and play on the stuff. Go several times a week for a month. You will develop a preference. Go from there.
Cheers.
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Sep-17-2003 02:20
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