i'm teaching my brother and sister how to mix, and they always wonder how i manage to hear the drop coming in the club. since i've taught them counting the beats and bars and understanding phrases they finally get it!
Coming up to 50 this year and just bought a ddj-flx4. Your videos are helping me understand the basics and why I'm doing it, thanks! Obviously I'm at that stage of thinking there is no way I will be able to count at the same time as mix things in 🤣 I guess the next stage is where you just are talking to your friend and suddenly start counting in bars whilst they look at you thinking you've gone mad! 🤣🤣
Hey, thanks for the video. I've been struggling with something similar lately and I don't know how can I achieve what I want by counting. Let's say I want to mix song A with song B. Song A has a hot cue (let's call it H) where it might be a hot cue to indicate the start of the outro. Song B has its downbeat at X minute. Song A has been playing and reaching to hot cue H. How can I count the bars/phrases left **until** hot cue H, so I can apply those in song B from the downbeat **and back** to achieve a perfect mixing? A fantastic timeline is below to show what I mean. song A is playing -----------------H song B is playing -----------------downbeat Not sure if I'm explaining it correctly though. Cheers!
Your tutorials are very useful and answering on point all the questions i was wondering. Thanks 🙏 But can’t seem to find the next video with the que points 🤔
great tutorial and great editing. the funny thing is that i'm very comfy producing music but find djing live very daunting experience and get pretty anxious when it comes to doing a perfect transition live. to the point i've actually done some premixes with epic transitions in daw but then there is a problem if the crowd doesn't get the song and it can't be skipped, which obviously sucks. any tips ?
Rather than spending the time premixing in the DAW - perhaps use that time to practice the mix on your decks instead. The more deck time you get the more confident you will become :) If it helps, literally plan and practice the entire set at home (as much as possible) beforehand. Hope it helps!
Yep I think that happens with many things you practice over and over. Counting music is really helpful when this is all totally new, but as you do it more and more you need to rely on it less
Becoming a Dj was one of my best ideas the past 10 years. I play guitar, drums, sing, and played live shows for 6 years with a metal genre type band. How I got the job was from a DJ who didn't want to play requests. He got overwhelmed by people asking for songs (derp) He left, and I asked my boss to go up and do it. I'm the definition of a social butterfly. So listening to people and interacting in general is easy. Even after the first 20 minutes of being in the overwhelmed friend of ours, I had a full dancefloor of people dancing. Even though I had no idea how to work the ddj800 past loading songs from tidal. So you can imagine haha. Loading one song, finding another, having it ready on deck two, rinse repeat. I'm in my 4th month now. I've ventured into production with edm and dance music. I've made hundreds of my own samples, learned how to code even haha. If you're musically gifted, and have no job currently, I suggest DJing or something similar. WIth the rapid growth of AI and many other tools available to us... it's absolutely the best time. Don't get stuck working the 9-5 that you hate. If you can, take a paycut. At least you'll be learning and improving yourself everyday... and enjoying it to boot.
FREE DJ Phrasing eBook:
➡ bit.ly/FreeDJPhrasingeBook
just turned 38, recently started practicing on my ddj 400 that's been sitting in my room for years. and i wanna thank u for being part of my journey
This makes me happy :) Never too late to get started! Glad I could play a small part
You should record some sets and listen back.
i'm teaching my brother and sister how to mix, and they always wonder how i manage to hear the drop coming in the club. since i've taught them counting the beats and bars and understanding phrases they finally get it!
soon as you get a netsky tune on you've got me hooked
Coming up to 50 this year and just bought a ddj-flx4. Your videos are helping me understand the basics and why I'm doing it, thanks! Obviously I'm at that stage of thinking there is no way I will be able to count at the same time as mix things in 🤣 I guess the next stage is where you just are talking to your friend and suddenly start counting in bars whilst they look at you thinking you've gone mad! 🤣🤣
Bars in a bar.. I’m feeling it 👌
Solid vid mate. Thank you!
I love subscribing in utero; as opposed to when Momma has to push; ya dig?
amazing video, great editing too.
Thank you!
Hey, thanks for the video. I've been struggling with something similar lately and I don't know how can I achieve what I want by counting.
Let's say I want to mix song A with song B.
Song A has a hot cue (let's call it H) where it might be a hot cue to indicate the start of the outro.
Song B has its downbeat at X minute.
Song A has been playing and reaching to hot cue H.
How can I count the bars/phrases left **until** hot cue H, so I can apply those in song B from the downbeat **and back** to achieve a perfect mixing?
A fantastic timeline is below to show what I mean.
song A is playing -----------------H
song B is playing -----------------downbeat
Not sure if I'm explaining it correctly though. Cheers!
I think this should help you out: th-cam.com/video/8L1pT6XcOkI/w-d-xo.html
Your tutorials are very useful and answering on point all the questions i was wondering. Thanks 🙏 But can’t seem to find the next video with the que points 🤔
th-cam.com/video/TPTbGmyfdeM/w-d-xo.html I think this is the one you were after :)
great tutorial and great editing. the funny thing is that i'm very comfy producing music but find djing live very daunting experience and get pretty anxious when it comes to doing a perfect transition live. to the point i've actually done some premixes with epic transitions in daw but then there is a problem if the crowd doesn't get the song and it can't be skipped, which obviously sucks. any tips ?
Rather than spending the time premixing in the DAW - perhaps use that time to practice the mix on your decks instead. The more deck time you get the more confident you will become :) If it helps, literally plan and practice the entire set at home (as much as possible) beforehand. Hope it helps!
little tip. people dont expect perfection, they just expect good music...make that your goal. . and just play more
My brain just does it automatically now after 14 years
Yep I think that happens with many things you practice over and over. Counting music is really helpful when this is all totally new, but as you do it more and more you need to rely on it less
Same here but mine comes from drumming so many years. It has greatly helped me dj.
@@DJTHRILLER i can see that being a massive help!
@@ReallyChrisM along with your videos 💪
@@DJTHRILLER yeah thats pretty cool. 😁. What equipment do you have to DJ
Checked your channel. No need to answer this. Lol
Becoming a Dj was one of my best ideas the past 10 years.
I play guitar, drums, sing, and played live shows for 6 years with a metal genre type band.
How I got the job was from a DJ who didn't want to play requests. He got overwhelmed by people asking for songs (derp)
He left, and I asked my boss to go up and do it. I'm the definition of a social butterfly. So listening to people and interacting in general is easy.
Even after the first 20 minutes of being in the overwhelmed friend of ours, I had a full dancefloor of people dancing. Even though I had no idea how to work the ddj800 past loading songs from tidal. So you can imagine haha. Loading one song, finding another, having it ready on deck two, rinse repeat.
I'm in my 4th month now. I've ventured into production with edm and dance music. I've made hundreds of my own samples, learned how to code even haha.
If you're musically gifted, and have no job currently, I suggest DJing or something similar. WIth the rapid growth of AI and many other tools available to us... it's absolutely the best time. Don't get stuck working the 9-5 that you hate. If you can, take a paycut. At least you'll be learning and improving yourself everyday... and enjoying it to boot.
Great story! Thanks for sharing, good luck on your journey