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Track Placement Question
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| Oreoh142 |
So yeah just a general question, where do you guys normally place your "best / favorite" tracks. The ones that you know will get the audience moving and what not. I always want to put them at the start of a mix, because I have the feeling that if I don't go all out at the start, then they wont be interested and just stop listening to the mix or what not.
So yeah just a general question. |
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| Dojomaster26 |
For a demo/mixtape I like to place the tunes that I feel make the peak of my sets in the middle and at the very end of the set. I'll also put some energetic tracks at the beginning of the mix to grab the listener's attention.
When playing live I like to space out my big tunes. Maybe I'll play a couple of attention-grabbers early on in the set, but its better to tease the audience and play the anthems between some lower-energy tracks. |
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| idoru |
| My favorite tracks go wherever their energy levels allow. Not all of my favorites are "banging" and not all of them are chilled. I don't place my favorites in a certain spot every time, I just put them wherever they fit best as I go (assuming I even play them). |
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| DJ Z |
| make your opening track your 'second best' track...gives the crowd a feel for your set immediately... |
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| Stu Cox |
I tend to try and throw out something to grab attention straight away - not normally one of the biggest tracks of the set, but usually a track with quite an original groove, particularly something quite different from what the previous DJ was playing (although hopefully not so different that it stops the flow - the idea is for it to be distinctive when it comes in)
I'd then try and put something pretty big within the 3 or 4 tracks, then (as the Dojomaster said) I'd usually try and put some other big tunes about half way through and towards the end, although unless it's a closing set I usually try and avoid ending on the biggest most impressive tune in the world - it can work quite well to take things down a notch then let the next DJ build up from there.
Of course it depends on the length of the set - the longer the set, the more "anthemic points" I'm likely to put into the set.
Most of the above applies to demos as well as club sets.
Obviously a warm-up's completely different... actually having said that, maybe it isn't - the big tracks aren't peak time anthems but there will be tracks which have the kind of groove that draws people onto the dancefloor etc, so I suppose they're likely to be put in similar places (apart from a catchy track to start with of course, just build from the ground up) |
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| nefardec |
I always play my favorite track in position number ´seven´. I like to call this the ´lucky seven track´.
Unless the track has an odd number of 32 beat phrases or the title starts with the consonants groups z, zh, st, sb, sp, or sk. Then it goes in the coveted spot of ´penultimate´track.
all my tracks are my favorites. why would i buy something i dislike |
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| Rebel Brown |
| quote: | Originally posted by nefardec
I always play my favorite track in position number 'seven'. I like to call this the 'lucky seven track'.
Unless the track has an odd number of 32 beat phrases or the title starts with the consonants groups z, zh, st, sb, sp, or sk. Then it goes in the coveted spot of 'penultimate' track. |
:stongue: |
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| Stu Cox |
| quote: | Originally posted by nefardec
I always play my favorite track in position number ´seven´. I like to call this the ´lucky seven track´. |
Tell ya what though, have you ever noticed that track 6 on just about any album is always one of the better tracks, but rarely the most popular? |
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| Stu Cox |
| quote: | Originally posted by nefardec
all my tracks are my favorites. why would i buy something i dislike |
I think the point was more aimed at the tracks which are most likely to go right off... but I agree it's not the best wording, most of my favourite tracks at the moment are deep groovers I throw in between the uplifting anthems. |
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| Oreoh142 |
| quote: | Originally posted by Stu Cox
I think the point was more aimed at the tracks which are most likely to go right off... but I agree it's not the best wording, most of my favourite tracks at the moment are deep groovers I throw in between the uplifting anthems. | yeah that is what i meant..sorry i do stink at wording things |
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| miss matthews |
If you're doing a longer set.. 3 or 4 hours.. you gotta save the best bombs for the last hour man!
First track is key. I start sexy.. vocal.. background.. get them drinking. When the energy is picking up and the room starts filling, I love throwin in 20 minutes of dirty bass..
You just have to learn how to read the crowd. Some people are listening, but most aren't lol - it's the ones that ARE listening who give energy to the rest of the room - chain reaction.. it picks up from there.
But all in all - save your bombs for the end!! Build it up ;-) |
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| DOOMBOT |
If you are referring to a live set then you can never answer this question with the same answer everytime. If 10 people are standing in a room that holds 500 then obviously you would want to wait to play your huge tracks until the room fills up. It really all depends. That is what the difference between a good dj and a not so good dj is, simply knowing what track to play and when.
And as for demo/mix cd's it is sort of the same thing. What direction do you want to take throughout the mix? It's easier to do this on a mix cd then in a live setting I think because when playing live, just because you want to shift a mood in the club doesn't mean that everyone else out there is ready for it. But when I pop in a cd in my car or at home it's easier to just sit there and wait to see where the mix goes and take me for the ride. |
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