Patrick Tyler wrote:I laughed when you said you learned to dj in two weeks. Ha. Your a joke. I'm sure if you were spinning at a club you would be trainwrecking people off the dance floor. You are a tool/poser. Grow up and learn to respect the artform of deejaying. Some of the best producers in the world today, and or were deejays. Go read a book or talk to someone with a little more knowledge than you. Knowledge is power.
c'mon man, is it really that hard to put a record on a turntable, or possibly even mix two record together--it is not that hard dude. Try learning to play guitar of keyboard or drums sufficiently well to go out and perfrom in front of an audience--it takes a hell of a lot longer to get proficient and confident on a instrument than to buy some wax and spin it at the local dance floor. He made a distinction between turntablists and DJ's, and his point is valid--it doesn't take that much talent OR pratice to spin someone else's tunes--with vinyl or with Live. Maybe I'm missing something, and I'm sure you'll say how much you have to know what's gong on in music, how you can read the crowd and play just the right top 40 hit at the right time, but spinning records isn't that hard. Killer scratching, or using 4 turntables at once spinning your own wax (RJD2--killer show live) takes talent and practice. Composing your own music from scratch (not just hacking together a bunch of loops on cds) takes talent and some knowledge of how music works, why it sounds good. Bottom line of what montreal was sayin' is that it is all too easy to be a DJ--you buy (or jack mp3s on the net) someone else's music, then you play it. Maybe you add some effects or beats on top, maybe you have two (or even three!) different songs (or parts of them) going at once. You transition from one song to the next. Sure, people that are good at it have tons of vinyl and a knack for things that work together well, but the bottom line is that yo are a disk jockey--jockeying (for the most part) someone else's music, not yours. I think we can all agree it is easier to spin music than create it. It is easier to make music using loops and samples from various sources than to make all the sounds and parts on your own by playing instruments. Playing real instruments and being at a level where you can perform live, and to be able to listen and jam with others takes years of practice. Sure, DJ's with years of practice will be better than ones with two weeks, but either could surely get the gig and keep the dancefloor happy (they just want music to dance to, they don't care who made it, or whether your spinning someone else's mix on a ipod, or if you have Live, or 5 turntables--its just music to them (and can you pleaasee play that Britney Spears song DJ?)). Seriously though, I'd like to understand your point of view--what are the aspects of DJ'ing that are so hard to master that two weeks isn't enough. Given that you have the gear, the records, and a good knowledge of music and dance floors, what are the technical aspects that make you scoff to think that someone could be sufficient in two weeks. please enlighten.
Ryan
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