
Originally Posted by
Komplex
i think to answer your quesiton, we have to look at the fact that playing records involves playing music that has already had countless hours put into it by the producers, composers, mastering engineers etc., creating a finished product that is paid for and ready to mix by the dj.
its a process of going down to your local record store and buying a bunch of these discs (anyone can buy them) and throwing them onto a pair or threesome of turntables and mixing it up.
now when you look at live artists, its not as quick or easy as going down to the record store and buying some music thats ready for playing. all those countless hours that go into producing a single record have to go into producing material for a single track for a live performance. then you have to create and prepare enough material for your live performance to cover for however long your set is PLUS take into acount all the tracks that you do not end up playing (because for every good track there are 10 shit ones that aren't worth using).
thats just the mathematics of the time invovled geting material ready.
lets go back a bit and look at the process of actually creating a track. first and foremost, to make a decent track you need musical ability and also production experience. that doesnt happen overnight.
also you have to mix and match your tools, gear and instruments to suit the way you perform your music in a live context. this isn't as simple as buying 2 decks and a mixer either. it usually takes live artists a number of years to perfect a combination of tools and once its perfected its often changed again.
and just like with mixing on turntables, a live act needs to practice and in many cases invent ways of mixing, improvising and creating elements on the fly with the gear they have.
ok. im gonna take a break for now and post more later...