Needs2Know wrote:angstrom wrote
Right now I feel like electronic musicians and DJs have been building a technological tunnel and just now have they met in the middle with a confused look on their faces.
i agree.
oh and i dont go to gawk at the DJ. wait a minute... are you guys saying when you go to a party to listen to a DJ who you love and admire that you never look at the DJ? lol. the only point i was trying to make is make your live act more then clicking on a mouse and you'll connect with the crowd better and they will connect with you. i get into the groove better when i can tell the DJ is getting into it and is loving it. people vibe off the Dj having fun. but i know there are performers who will not bring up anything but their laptop and thats fine. because then ill stand out when i go up on stage
do what you will
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i vibe off the people on the dancefloor having fun. I really don't care about the DJ, maybe i am oldskool in that department, but a good DJ for me is someone that plays good music in the right order (ie programming). I can fully understand why someone like moodymann started DJ'ing behind a curtain. There is nothing to be seen about a DJ, selecting music, cue'ing it, and working the mixer. For the last few years i am often really surprised about entering a club where half of the dancefloor is bouncing around a little, and everybody staring at the DJ (and at eachothers backs), and taking their cue's from the DJ (there is a break coming up, DJ is working the EQ and waving in the air, dancefloor is also waving in the air etc.etc.). It seems that people have become more and more sheepish over the years. In the beginning of house and techno a dancefloor was purely about listening to the music, people would go crazy over new music they'd never heard before. But now it seems people only come for a certain name, and don't care a bit about the music, if it's a big name DJ they will react to it, if it's a non-name they won't even bother to dance. The content itself, the music, doesn't seem to matter one bit. And that's sad.
so i'm afraid you're kind of right. If you put up a mix-album and start jumping around like a madman, putting up a big show, people will probably enjoy it much more than a quiet DJ playing the most amazing music in a concentrated state. And personally, i think that's sad, and also killing the dancemusic scene and the innovation that's so important for it.
Really, when we do a live performance, and take half of my studio on stage, dress up, have live vocals and also have a very good VJ show, people will still come up to us and say that our DJ-set was so cool! the regular clubaudience really doesn't understand what a live performance is about, to them it's all DJ'ing. I've been DJ'ing for over 15 years, and personally i really feel that the last years most dancefloors have really become focused on the name of the DJ and his/her act, and really don't care a bit about music anymore.
Olaf