Seen a DJ without gear rock the crowd…
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- This topic has 13 replies, 1 voice, and was last updated 13 years, 3 months ago by
NietzSKY.
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December 23, 2012 at 12:24 pm #33999
Terry_42
KeymasterThat is what I preach all the time. If you do not read the crowd, have a good sense of music and a general passion for what you do… you will not make it.
Bottom line: DJing is (mostly) playing other peoples songs to make other people (not you!) happy and have a good time.
All the things we do like beatmatching, effects, loops, scratching, you name it, are only the added flavour that will make it more special.Like the other day I got a really really good filet of red snapper. I love this fish. Now the fish, simply because I love it, will taste good even if I just add a bit of salt and pepper, roast it in a pan and serve it. It will be awesome.
However if I add a little butter when roasting it, some jalapeรฑos and a hint of lemmon it will be awesome and then some…
But basically the red snapper has to be good in the first place or the added spices will be worthless. If I did the same thing to a rotten old fish, it would still taste nasty….
So if you play a song nobody wants to hear it will be bad, no matter how good your DJ skills are. But a good song at the right time, might even come out of the radio and make a whole bar happy.December 23, 2012 at 12:29 pm #34000Milos Djordjevic
ParticipantThat sounds awesome!
December 24, 2012 at 2:58 am #34020VinnyBlanc
ParticipantSong selection is about 95% of it…
December 24, 2012 at 3:49 am #34024NietzSKY
ParticipantHonestly, I do believe we can be snobby. Even worse, I feel, is classical pianists critiquing performances of other classical pianists. You guys are pretty tame compared to that scene XD.
I posted about my first gig, and without split cue working for me my mix (which was 100% improvised) sounded, to a dj, like a wooden roller coaster ride. However, the crowd was loving the fx I was throwing on, and I was even getting applause after I jammed Afrojack’s Molly cover. There was even a point where I went to reach for my mic and my sleeve caught on the knob of my beatmasher; I just started laughing, played off my mistake, and had djs/musicians sharing similar stories w/ me after my set, and still complimenting the performance.
Now don’t get me wrong, in my opinion I don’t have the raw skill to compete with 75-80% of this forum, but people going to events/dancing out on the floor aren’t dis. Many of the nuances we notice are completely unnoticeable to the untrained ear, and as long as there is a flow and no empty space, it seems as if everything just works out.
December 24, 2012 at 8:27 am #34038Terry_42
KeymasterVery well said NietzSKY. Totally agree.
Had the same thing with a guitarist buddy of mine. He was using a 500 bucks modeller amp for ages with his band. Now he invested in a 2000 bucks tube amp setup. Of course as a musician you noticed something, but when asking someone in the crowd “do you like the new guitar sound?” – I got dull faces and “what do you mean, he plays like he always does…”December 24, 2012 at 8:56 am #34043Dj RM
MemberThank you you guys for your opinions. Sincerely, that’s why I love this forum : everybody here keeps in mind that the most important isn’t cue juggling and making damn combinations of effects with a strange midi contoller ! (even if it still fun for us)
Spending time on this forum make me realise that I don’t want to be a futuristic digital performer, I just want to a good dj using digital gear for better playlists management and easier mixing ๐
December 24, 2012 at 5:34 pm #34054JayBurge
Memberreally interesting back and forth and from a dance head moving into djing its weird how snobby some parts of this scene are. I think regardless of being snobby about gear I think dance music in itself is mega snobby. I’ve been getting myself out to loads of raves these past few months and have seen just as good a set from a commercial dj to that of some next big thing, under ground, prog/tech/deep house if you havent heard of him you don’t know anything dj.
From my experience though the guys on this forum steer well clear of being snobby. That you actually take the time to answer “I am new which dj controller should I use” for the thousandth time with courtesy is brilliant.
Banging tunes reading the crowd and getting involved and having fun is what its about. ๐
December 24, 2012 at 10:12 pm #34059Bunyip
MemberI love that story Menno. Everyone who calls themselves a DJ should have to do that before they can truly own that title. I would much rather be in that bar than one where some guy is doing all the right technical stuff but with boring tunes.
That vibe is kind of what I do at my monthly gig. For anyone who remembers The Goodies, I played that theme song (the second series funkier version) at my Christmas gig and got big thumbs up. (Note to self – buy Inspector Gadget theme song!)December 25, 2012 at 2:44 pm #34075Dj RM
MemberIn france we have “capitaine flam” (captain flam) which is really kitsch. I just DL it and I thing it will be fun ton play !
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December 26, 2012 at 9:58 am #34090DJ Menno
ParticipantDj RM, post: 34231, member: 5602 wrote: In france we have “capitaine flam” (captain flam) which is really kitsch.
Man I’m in Geneva Switzerland, and I’ve grown up to that song… a little overused, but it never misses to get the crowd crazy ๐
I can’t wait for my new year’s gig in my local bar. I’m gonna try to be the guy with the two smartphones….
or maybe take my controller, just for some beatmatching… and throw a few effects… a few loops, just for the flow
I could even mix more than 2 songs at a time, and add a vocal loop !! and an echo and rev…
oups…did it again…
๐
December 26, 2012 at 5:53 pm #34100gr4v1ty
MemberTerry_42, post: 34155, member: 1843 wrote: That is what I preach all the time. If you do not read the crowd, have a good sense of music and a general passion for what you do… you will not make it.
Bottom line: DJing is (mostly) playing other peoples songs to make other people (not you!) happy and have a good time.
All the things we do like beatmatching, effects, loops, scratching, you name it, are only the added flavour that will make it more special.I totally agree with everything except what is in bold. Yeah, to be sucessfull, you have to do this. But over all, being a sucessful DJ is making the people love YOUR new hits and music! And playing music you don’t like, is not going to be fun as DJ and you may be sucessfull, but will you like it?
December 26, 2012 at 10:52 pm #34103DJ Stone Crazy
ParticipantDigital DJs are getting just as bad as the vinyl people? “What? No controller?!”
December 26, 2012 at 11:11 pm #34105NietzSKY
ParticipantI view DJing (not saying DJing is, just my interpretation of it) as a sort of photography; photographers don’t necessarily create the scenes they are shooting, but they add new perspectives and the art is in allowing others to see/hear something in a different way than they have before. You can be a set designer photographer (producer/dj) but you don’t have to be; it’s not imperative to the art.
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