Of course it is different. I was exaggerating my argument but surely you must see where I am coming from. Dubstep has a big following of DJ's and people who genuinely appreciate DJ'ing as you have seen in this thread in honesty who like to see a DJ turn up and actually get hands on. People go to see Andy C because of not just his tune selection his absolute sublime skill. Same way people like Youngsta for his skill just as much as his tune selection. If either one of those DJ's jumped onto laptops and started auto-beatmatching their followings would dwindle seriously.slothrop wrote:Erm yeah, because brostep would never have happened without controllers. Just like clownstep didn't happen when everyone played vinyl. Oh no wait it did.
B-Frank wrote:If people want a guy pressing buttons on a laptop they'd just ask for cheaper tickets and forget booking acts and stick a CD on.mikeyp wrote:let's not all forget the point of DJing in the first place, and that is to make people dance. when it comes down to it, if you're doing that, who gives a fuck how it's being done
Yes or no question - do you genuinely think that a DJ who mixes using automatic beatmatching on a laptop is no different from putting a CD on?
As someone who is a DJ and has had an interest in mixing for a long time I want to preserve the art. CDJ's were a compromise from Vinyl as they combine the best of analogue and digital worlds but laptop DJ'ing is a step too far and takes away from the general skill of it. I have mates who can mix on virtual DJ by auto syncing but if I let them have a spin on my decks it sounds like a train wreck.
Also may I add... I am not completely against "bro-step", that isn't why I think laptop DJ'ing is detrimental. Dubstep used to be a scene that idolised DJ's and their skills, that was probably out of all scenes was the biggest backer of vinyl and it seems like the skill is being taken out to an extent and it's getting to the point any new producer can make a tune, practice mixing for an hour and go out and DJ at a club.


