Home 2023 Forums The DJ Booth trying to learn to mix

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  • #34401

    There’s no set formula for this stuff, but as a general rule for me I try not to mix the melodies of each song together. In a lot of edm there’s a break from the beat i.e. just pads, vocal acapellas etc. The easiest way to mix two songs together is to mix the intro of one song into the ‘break’ of the other. At the same bpm this should be relatively simple, especially if you’re mixing songs with simple 16/32 bar sections. Hope that makes sense!

    #34407
    Terry_42
    Keymaster

    Did you check out our online course:
    http://djtips.co/fast-info

    I think Phil explains it pretty good there.

    #34420
    Le Doc
    Member

    I agree taking this course is a lot of help, but i find that there isn’t enough time spent on explaining different transition types and how-tos, like with FX for example. Maybe an intermediate course could fix that? I’m trying to find on youtube some vids teaching different transitions but cant find any as good as Phil’s.

    #34421
    DJ Yaka
    Participant

    You could try checking out DJ Tutor on YouTube:
    http://www.youtube.com/user/ellaskins
    I learnt a lot off him when I was first starting out

    #34424
    Le Doc
    Member

    DJ Yaka wrote: You could try checking out DJ Tutor on YouTube:
    http://www.youtube.com/user/ellaskins
    I learnt a lot off him when I was first starting out

    Thx for the tip ill check it out

    #34427
    Daryl Northrop
    Participant

    I agree with the others, aim to mix the two songs together during the break. Melody mixing or harmonic mixing sounds effing magical when it’s done right, but it is difficult to do.

    #34429
    Hee Won Jung
    Participant

    Theres no real wrong way or right way to mix…there is only what sounds good and what sounds like garbage.

    There are so many different ways to mix that there is no rule of thumb. Every Genre can be mixed but they may sometimes involve different mixing techniques.

    A lot of it is trial and error…and thinking that you are going to master it in a short time is really naive…The more time you put into it the more you are getting it.

    A few tips i would suggest is that when you are practicing, make mistakes, try using different things, do things going into it knowing you are going to screw up. Getting frustrated is a waste of time as it is very counter productive to what you are trying to achieve.

    A big thing for me is that when i practice i NEED to be alone, I always feel that if someone is listening that i need to make it sound good and then i dont take risks and try new things.

    When im refering to practicing…i mean when you make a mistake stop, go back and try to do it again…keep doing it over and over until you know it sounds good…then move onto some other tracks and do the same thing…having the ears to make perfect mixes and getting used to song structure doesnt happen over night…for some they have a natural talent and pick it up easy…for others its something they need to work on everyday.

    Either way you will eventually get it!

    #34470
    TeflonDon
    Member

    I know it’s old school but get the book “How to DJ properly” It will help a LOT!

    I tend to mix using phrasing (so the buildups and breakdowns all match up) as opposed to running loops like some djs I’ve seen do as I find this quite confusing.

Viewing 8 posts - 1 through 8 (of 8 total)
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