Yep thats all u need sum times just a little sly mix out aslong as it's always building in power and flowing in right direction...Lenny dee is a ****in master of this aswell.
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Yep thats all u need sum times just a little sly mix out aslong as it's always building in power and flowing in right direction...Lenny dee is a ****in master of this aswell.
I'd say that the majority of the tunes in this set that he does are all around the same bpm, I didn't notice any chances in tempo really.
Back on a hardstyle level, The Prophet drop mixes a lot - like I said earlier it sounds awesome when done well, but it's surprisingly hard to pull off (at least with vinyl anyway).
Its amazing how many people have jumped in on this topic and havent watched the video :doh: If you watch the video, you will see that his set is pretty much a contant bpm all the way through, so talking about varying speeds of hardcore has **** all to do with this set. I have watched the whole of it, and it is quite a respectable set.Quote:
Originally Posted by Mindful
lol.. varying speeds has all to do with it.
You can't compare G-Shock - Demons or Nosferatu - The underground stream with tracks like 'phreak ya speaka' etc. HUGE bpm difference
I've seen it live btw
Not with the set that this guy was on about :crackup: The set, which this thread was all about, which has a link at the begining to, does not have a varied speed. It starts around 150, stays around 150 and finishes at 150. I am not disputing the fact that hardcore wildly ranges in speed, i mix enough of it myself, but the fact is people are arguing a point, which for this set posted, is not valid :doh:Quote:
Originally Posted by ScuL
I know what the problem is.
You guys havent seen part 2
mms://83.149.66.2/Promo2-cqx
Why, is that one really bad?
Most of us are saying this is a great set!
No but the varying BPM's are mostly used in the 2nd half
part 2 is bangin didnt know these had part 2's heheQuote:
Originally Posted by ScuL