Tips for beginners
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- This topic has 4 replies, 1 voice, and was last updated 14 years, 2 months ago by
eros.
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January 26, 2012 at 8:11 am #1002715
synthet1c
Memberlet yourself do the wrong thing so you can learn from it, It’s not that hard to beatmatch and it cant be explained apart from saying, match the two songs together. To do that however you need to be able to listen to the two tracks in a different way & you need to have the coordination to move your hand in syncronicity with your brain, you also need the confidence in your ability to do the right thing at the right time.
There is no easy way to achieve that without putting in time learning, making mistakes and practicing until doing it becomes instinctive. Finally if you are looking at waveforms you are cheating yourself. My experience of djing is if I can see the sound it takes over my hearing, and I make jerky adjustments to the record because I’m not listening to it anymore, just matching up two waveforms on the screen. Now my computer is off to the side and I use a skin that hides the waveforms until I press a key on the keyboard to show it if I ever need it, but never do.
January 26, 2012 at 9:07 am #1002716U31
MemberMy tip? Record EVERYTHING!
Listen back, think how you could have done that mix differently, try different methods, experiment…Now im probably gonna get in trouble for this suggestion here… but this is just for LEARNING purposes only, never ever do this if you play out! You have a favourite DJ mix, yeah? Buy the singles in that mix, first, try to recreate that mix, think about how the original dj did each blend, then try to recreate it. Practice practice practice. When you have that nailed, take the tracks and stamp YOUR ideas on there, change the order, remove tracks and try them with other new tracks you like.. cut it up but remember, always record and then listen back… there will be no one more critical of your work then yourself!
January 26, 2012 at 11:27 am #13391synthet1c
Memberyou thirty wizzals got the right idizal, great advice 😀
January 28, 2012 at 4:23 am #13470eros
MemberI agree with everything said so far but I’ll add my two cents worth here also.
I think the style of music that you play also has some bearing into the way you mix.
Whilst some elements are universal, for example being on beat, there are other techniques
that work for some styles but not others.The next point I’d make is that there are many elements to a track, BPM, key, phrasing
etc and these all need to be considered when you’re trying to blend two pieces of music
together. One thing to try is experimenting with the EQ’s,for example have the low EQ
killed on the track your bringing in and see how it matches with the track your playing.
When starting out I think focusing on EQ’s is far more important than using effects.The other point is track selection…some tracks no matter what you try just won’t work
together, but this is still a great learning tool because the important thing is to recognise it and
ask yourself why not ? Over time getting a “feel” for what works and doesn’t will become
like second nature and your ears will tell you pretty much straight away.Sorry for rambling on a bit here, but my last and most important point (this is how I learnt) find sets
or mixes of your favourite DJ and just listen….listen over and over again to the transitions and how they
bring tracks in. Whether it’s a seamless smooth blend, a sudden drop, a complete kill or vocals
of the second track over the bass line of the first etc . If your into progressive/tribal/trance than my suggestion
would be Armin Van Buuren’s Year Mix compilations. Each CD has around 60 tracks which go for
around 2 mins each so its basically transition after transition.Lastly, there’s no right or wrong. The beauty of out art is that you can stamp your own personal style on it,
so whilst there are a few fundamental basics, just enjoy yourself and go for it ! Good luck with it ! -
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