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  1. #1
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    Default Smooth Mixing or fiddling?

    I personally LOVE smooth mixing. I really love doing seemless mixing in the comfort of my own studio. But go out and play and it just doesnt seem to wash. In techno clubs, if you don't cut things up, mash things about then you just don't get the crowd response. Why is this?

    Perhaps I'm playing in the wrong clubs? I've really noticed this recently and would love to get a discussion going about it? Perhaps it's just me!!! hahaha.

  2. #2
    The Demon Beast
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    smooth long mixes show more skill
    Wetworks
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  3. #3
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    I love smooth mixing.

    Defo a good gauge of skill.

    I get annoyed with people who say beatmixing is 'easy'...'can't master it in a couple of weeks theres something wrong with you'. I'd like to see these people hold a mix for a couple of minutes whilst away from the decks searching for the next track that's gona sound good.

  4. #4
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    any dj can cut up but not all dj's can cut up in a way that works and enhances the tracks being played. Subtle fiddling and cutting in a smooth set gets a great reaction but there's nowt worse than 2 tracks being blended together when they just don't work

  5. #5
    Junior Freak
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    Its all about smooth mixing for me, but there are times when the mix is gagging for some cutting and beat juggling.

  6. #6
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    i love to be able to play a track through to the end. i know my records and what'll work,so that gives time for choppin. But i agree it needs to be subtle not just bangin the crossfader across for 4 beats every 16 bars! i like to use nice edits in the incoming track eg: kektex - lock had a drop early on in it where everything dropped for 4 beats and a vocal just said "LOCK" and then 4 303 notes hit really low. things like that make for lovely mixes... but like everything theres always exceptions and you need to know when these are gonna happen. sometimes a backspin and into the new track early on in the mix can pick a crowd right up and introduce an element of urgency. anyway just my thoughts...

  7. #7

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    Quote Originally Posted by SummerOfSam
    smooth long mixes show more skill
    I disagree. Both long, smooth mixes, and mixes that involve chopping, cutting and scratching are skills in their own right. I don't think you can say, for example, that Sasha is a better DJ than Jeff Mills, as both are huge superstars that made their names in their own way. I agree that transferring your mixing from studio to club involves massive differences, and in that sense I'd say that a DJ that performs long, smooth mixes all the time is probably well experienced with loud systems and different booth setups, but I would be cautious about calling them "more skillful."

    "Back in the day" DJ's didn't even have the equipment available to perform smooth mixes, the set ups were crude, but the DJ's were not, they manipulated, chopped, cut and dropped tracks in such a skillful way as to make the performance as seamless as possible - making the music smooth and progressive could only be done by messing with the music so much as to confuse the audience as to what just started, and what just finished. That's a skill in it's own right, and the smoothest DJ in the world may struggle to perform the same way, thus their skills may be said to be lacking.

    It all boils down to personal taste at the end of the day - I know people that cannot stand (even a good DJ) chopping the music up - they just want the music to play.

    As for the initial post, I can kind of understand why crowds prefer the manipulation - it's a pretty common thing now. But at the end of the day, it makes things more exciting when done well - I always used to love the whole "unnatural sonic discordancy" with DJ's such as Mills and May chopping and generally animalistcially pogoing through music in a way that just didn't make any sense at all, and it's those dark messy moments that have the greatest effect on the dancefloor - the crowd just simply don't know what's going on.

    Overall, I think it's just representative of how the scene has changed over the years, and a good DJ is a good DJ regardless of their style - so long as the music is good, nothing else matters really (except soundsystem, crowd, venue, how easy it is to get home etc etc :lol: )

  8. #8
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    i find smooth mixing quite boring in a club, i like to chop it up, bring the mix in straight in off the break with the eq's up, so you get a nice fat mix. sometimes i like to keep it in the mix for the whole tune sometimes not depends on the tune and the situation. But something that i do hate is when people play a tune till the end mix it in at the end of the tune then stand around the rest of the time. You need to put on a bit of a show, look like your actually doing something. Thats why chopping it up works with the crowd as your entertaining not just with your music but also by your actions. Thats why Marks sets are so memorable cos he puts on a good show, and you cant help but dance when you there's some nutta behind the decks 'avin it.

  9. #9
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    It depends on the mood, the place, and the people and I gues always some people will be looking for a smooth seamless set, so for mashing it up.

    As I don't DJ I cant'd really say from that pint of view, but from playing live, I've had both work - where I've taken my full rig out and have a planned set thats' a lot more smooth I think you get people more tranced out and into the whole set - where I've taken minimla kit out and just pissed about with loops on the fly you do sometimes lose people a bit when you mash up and it doesn't quite work, but then there is more energy overall and to play it it's more fun...
    Pure F*ckin' Noize Terror...

  10. #10
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    Quote Originally Posted by SummerOfSam
    smooth long mixes show more skill
    disagree antonio.. sorry.

    I dont think its a good judge of skill as a DJ.. its a good judge of a persons ability to do long mixes.

    As for the whole question of long or skittish...

    BOTH in equal measure when needed. Its like asking the question.. long shag or hard shag..

    both can be satisfying..

  11. #11
    M.O.D.
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    do a bit of both, and also do some short, sweet mixes to keep the tunes rolling and keep it varied. the most interesting DJs, IMO, are the ones who do it all.
    The law is not the private property of lawyers, nor is justice the exclusive province of judges and juries. In the final analysis, true justice is not a matter of courts and law books, but of a commitment in each of us to liberty and mutual respect. - Jimmy Carter

  12. #12
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    smooth blending when you carnt quite figure out when one tune end and the next begins.... is an art that is without doubt the best! BUT i feel in clubs it dont get the best response as droping a PHAT beat over the another or cutting up 2 tracks ... i guess its a crowd thing ....if you where playing to a room of djs i reckon smooth blending is the one but to a crowd of munted ravers its got to be mash it up !!!
    JUNE 19TH - TECHNO MANCUNIA ... JULY 10TH JEFF MILLS @SANKEYS ... JULY 18TH MARK EG & FRIENDS (GLENN WILSON) ... JULY 25TH SQUARE FESTIVAL (BILLY NASTY & NEIL LANDSTRUM)

  13. #13
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    For me a good should dj bring all techniques into play *at the right moment*

    Either can be as dull or as exciting as each other depending entirely on when it’s been done. I like both. Long mixing can be great at adding depth and interaction between rhythms and sounds in tracks and sometimes something really epic can happen. However when its like this all the time it gets boring and that’s when I think the cutting comes into play to add a bit more energy and make the crowd acknowledge the dj

  14. #14
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    yeah, i lobve hearing long smooth mixes, but i also enjoy hearing some nice cuts and more aggressive mixing in the right places.

    a good combination works for me, i get bored if i hear a dj doing the same thing every mix
    Life is "trying things to see if they work"

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  15. #15
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    smooth mixing, cutting, half beat tricks, scratching, all have their place. It shows most skill if a dj can do all of these, at the right moment. Some tracks are meant to be mixed to the end, some tracks get boring if you let it play for too long.

    Techno is one of the few straight beat styles that actually allows for tricks, cuts ect, without it effecting the flow of the mix. Some of the stuff you can do with techno, you could not get away with for progressive or hard trance, or house. With those genres' you are pretty much limiting yourself to "smooth mixes". With a techno set, you can pick and choose your mixing style with almost every different mix.

    Versatility is key. thats what shows most skill.

  16. #16
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    Quote Originally Posted by SlavikSvensk
    do a bit of both, and also do some short, sweet mixes to keep the tunes rolling and keep it varied. the most interesting DJs, IMO, are the ones who do it all.
    agreed , couldn't have put it better myself , sometimes i like to do seamless mixes , other times i want to really shock and excite people, and that requires skill and spontaenity, i just improvise all the other time, keeps me on my toes and creative

  17. #17
    The Demon Beast
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    varied opinions in here that's good, which dj's do you guys find to add both elements?
    I think Sims & Eg, do this very well. Finke, Slobodan, plenty more.
    Wetworks
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  18. #18
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    well dave the drummer - rtb have got it all

  19. #19
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    ^ dave the drummer is the best example in my opinion....

  20. #20
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    deetron.
    The law is not the private property of lawyers, nor is justice the exclusive province of judges and juries. In the final analysis, true justice is not a matter of courts and law books, but of a commitment in each of us to liberty and mutual respect. - Jimmy Carter

 

 
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