Sunday, 5 January 2014

Dj tips 3

Plan in Threes
This is a method of organizing music for DJ
performance that I’ve found to work extremely
well in my own experience. When planning a set I
like to find three records that mix well together
at a time. Optimally these three records can all
be played together at once or they can transition
into one another. Next I find another set of three.
Then another. Eventually I have a stack of records
that are organized by how they mix together, and
I start to organize those sets of three into a flow
of slow to fast / mellow to banging. I like to have
60 tracks selected for an hour of performance. I
won’t play all 60 (I usually play around 20 tracks
per hour) and I won’t always play those exact
mixes (spontaneity is still important in a DJ set),
but I have options that go in every direction and I
know that I can find my way from one type of
sound to another while staying deep in the mix
the whole way. Knowing this allows me to be
much more experimental on-the-fly and it always
works better than if I don’t plan.

Dj tips 2

Be Flexible
As a professional DJ you don’t necessarily have
to take requests, you can stand by your own style
and selection. However, playing more than one
specific style of music is a great way to gain
more opportunities for performance. There are
many different types of clubs and events, and
different types of crowds — try to find selections
from your music collection that will work with
these different groups

DJ tips 1

Practice and Prepare
Practice makes for much better DJ sets than a
free-form approach to the craft. Having only a
vague idea of what you are going to play usually
makes for a halfhearted DJ set. You’ll find that
accomplished turntablists and groove-riders alike
have all spent countless hours perfecting their
sets. We don’t necessarily recommend pre-
planning the entire set, either, but you should get
to know your options before you show up to
perform. Spend time to find tracks that mix well
and make playlists of those tunes for future use.
Make different kinds of playlists for different kinds
of gigs. Finding tracks that work well together
takes time and it rarely happens spontaneously at
the gig.