yeah, you're not paid to play a CD.
and how hard is it to mix dnb anyways? all most of them do is:
play record...drop new record at break...play record...drop new record at break, etc.
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yeah, you're not paid to play a CD.
and how hard is it to mix dnb anyways? all most of them do is:
play record...drop new record at break...play record...drop new record at break, etc.
The law is not the private property of lawyers, nor is justice the exclusive province of judges and juries. In the final analysis, true justice is not a matter of courts and law books, but of a commitment in each of us to liberty and mutual respect. - Jimmy Carter
what a joke... its sad...
sure a lot of dnb djs do that, but check out an andy c set or an old randall set and you'll see there's alot more to it then that. you can do some cool stuff with eq's and bassline switching. a few (me inc) make of use fx and such as well. dave clarke made exactly the same comment and got schooled in exactly the same way on white noise from i love techno a week or two ago :lol:
part of the problem is that nowadays the dnb tunes do all the work. so much of it has these ridiculous buildups (kickrolls sigh) and the tunes are super busy and overcompressed, which leaves little room for any serious mixing. luckily this is mainly something you get with the more mainstream formulated stuff.
alternately you could just make 15-20 min mashups and burn them to cd like some (future prophecies and adam f) of the other big name dnb djs do :embarrassed: