Home 2023 Forums The DJ Booth Mixing Pop: Play whole track or half?

Viewing 8 posts - 1 through 8 (of 8 total)
  • Author
    Posts
  • #2450021
    Mark Darlington
    Participant

    The short answer is DJ’s choice, with some rules. I tend to play the whole track, using loops & cue points for my mix. If it’s a request, play as much of the track as you can. Don’t mix just to show you can, if your crowd wants pop music chances are they don’t care how you mix your next track in.

    #2450031
    Craig
    Participant

    Awesome. Thanks for the reply and explanation. This defiantly helps.

    #2450071
    Dj vitico BL
    Participant

    pop music songs arent that long to begin with ,mixing in during breaks might make the songs too short, so be prepared to play a lot of songs in a short time if thats your intention , it is fun to mix shorter pop songs and radio version because the time is short and makes it a bit more challenging as a dj and also cool for the crowd as they are probably not used to seeing a dj do his thing on those kinds of songs

    #2450291
    Mikael Andersson
    Participant

    I agree with Mark but have a comment about that people don“t care how you mix. I think I understand what he want to say, like people into EDM are more into mixing than people listen to pop but I believe good mixing will make listening/dancing to the music more enjoyable even if pop listener maybe not understand what you do.

    #2450581
    DJ Vintage
    Moderator

    The purpose of good mixing in my – as always very humble – opinion is to make transitions between tracks less obvious and even surprising the audience by moving them from track A to track B before they really realize what is happening. It helps create and maintain a “flow”. That said, there are moments in most nights I play (as a mobile DJ, but also in my days as club resident) that you need clear changes, moments where you want the audience to be conscious to a change, moments where you want to almost force another tempo, genre or mood. Those are the moments that other mixing skills than beat matching come into play. This can be something as simple as a 4-beat silence, possibly combined with a nice accapella drop, sample or even mic use.

    Clearly with digital DJ-ing there are plenty of options to remix, reshape or just lengthen a track on the fly, using loops, cue points, flip (or comparable other options), fx, etx.

    While music selection will always trump everything else, with a margin, having a well-stuffed toolbox will help you make the most of whatever kind of music you want to play.

    #2450601
    Craig
    Participant

    Thanks everybody for the advice. I just put down my first Pop demo last night. Check it out and give honest feedback please.

    #2450691
    Tord
    Participant

    Thanks for sharing this mix! I’ve been trying to figure out pop mixing as well. I’ve also felt like it’s giving less room for creativity and performance features, and that it’s more about seamless transitions, like what Vintage describes above..

    – Tord

    #2453351
    Vedith Koganti
    Participant

    I totally like your pop mix.But keep going forward. Have a nice day:)

Viewing 8 posts - 1 through 8 (of 8 total)
  • The forum ‘The DJ Booth’ is closed to new topics and replies.