Unless you're playing live please never mix as shown at 3:30. For a TH-cam or SoundCloud mix you should fade in the other track slowly rather than full blast the next track with sloppy beatmatching. It's not optimal for the listener.
Not necessarily. “Sloppy beat matching” aside, it depends on the song choices. Some songs can flow into each other seamlessly in many different ways than others; depending on their key, base tone and timing. Fading in and out is just a safe and textbook way to learn but there are many approaches into mixing songs together.
@@ItzMiKeKirbY of course you could argue that doing his style of transition fits great with for example most orbit1 or any other 2008-2012 hardcore tunes. The problem for most modern UK hardcore tunes is just that 90% of their tunes have weird melodic intros and just don't quite fit for this mixing style. It's just my opinion and what I used to do back when I was still active
@@VicUPx Yeah, a lot of Force and Styles older tracks weren’t very Dj Friendly due to the lack of stripped down intro/outro beat phrases. Field of Dreams is a good example of this since it starts and ends with a piano melody and doesn’t have the build up.
I just picked up DJing at the same time I fell in love with DJs like Gladde Paling and S3rl I think it was meant to be
Hey this is Aliquem from Rizumu, I just started picking up DJing and totally thankful for this tutorial
No worries! Glad it helped!
so helpful didnt know any one of these basics :)
Glad it helped!
Just found your chanenel, I'm just learning how to produce music now, you have a new subscriber!
What a legendary tutorial 👏👏
Hi m8! Nice tutorial! 👏👏👏😍😍😍🔥🔥🔥🎶🎶🎶🔉🔉🔉
Great Tutorial
Unless you're playing live please never mix as shown at 3:30. For a TH-cam or SoundCloud mix you should fade in the other track slowly rather than full blast the next track with sloppy beatmatching. It's not optimal for the listener.
Not necessarily. “Sloppy beat matching” aside, it depends on the song choices. Some songs can flow into each other seamlessly in many different ways than others; depending on their key, base tone and timing. Fading in and out is just a safe and textbook way to learn but there are many approaches into mixing songs together.
@@ItzMiKeKirbY of course you could argue that doing his style of transition fits great with for example most orbit1 or any other 2008-2012 hardcore tunes. The problem for most modern UK hardcore tunes is just that 90% of their tunes have weird melodic intros and just don't quite fit for this mixing style. It's just my opinion and what I used to do back when I was still active
@@VicUPx Yeah, a lot of Force and Styles older tracks weren’t very Dj Friendly due to the lack of stripped down intro/outro beat phrases. Field of Dreams is a good example of this since it starts and ends with a piano melody and doesn’t have the build up.
its like the easiest shit to mix lol