Glad there some some dj's left who don't leak shit!I consider my dubs sacriligious, and would kill* anyone tryna demean their value.
To many traders lol
I would hope theres at least 500 people worldwide who would want a copy of a good enough tune tune on 12" vinyl. If a further market of home listeners/cd & laptop heads and non dj's want to buy an mp3 at a lower cost I'm all for it, its still getting the music out there.CRYPTIC wrote:How long till the vinyl goes tho?
Whats the average sale of vinyl in dubstep!
4x4 - your lucky to push 500
i live all the way up north in helsinki so i'm definitely going to fly over to london to press 10 tunes + all the tunes i get from my friends on dub while i can barely pay the rentCRYPTIC wrote: i live all the way up north in Sheffield, and i use trip all the way down to liquid mastering in london just to get my own tunes pressed on dub!
eff that. i'll always be a vinyl head. anyone can buy a laptop and download and pirate whatever digital files they want, but i think vinyl will always live. there's way too much stuff on vinyl that doesn't exist in digital form. plus digital mixing requires practically no skill at all. digital crap eliminates a lot of the art form of being a dj, but it does have it's uses. the only thing i would support is stuff like serato and final scratch. they're about as close to vinyl as you can get. anything that lets you instantly match and sync beats is pretty lame and if that's all you use/know, then you shouldn't even consider yourself a dj because a 2 year old could do the same thing. plus vinyl just sounds better. i would only use that stuff if i was playing my own tunes or traveling a lot and couldn't carry crates of records with me. to each their own though.TigerMoff wrote:This is the 21st century and crackly old expensive plastic rules no more. Move with the times.
What a choade.CRYPTIC wrote:THEN PRESS YOU OWN MUSIC FOOL! - It doesn't cost that much!
i live all the way up north in Sheffield, and i use trip all the way down to liquid mastering in london just to get my own tunes pressed on dub!
thats whats its all about!
CD DJ'S - HAVE RUINED THE INDUSTRY!
Perhaps i should do the same.thesynthesist wrote:What a choade.CRYPTIC wrote:THEN PRESS YOU OWN MUSIC FOOL! - It doesn't cost that much!
i live all the way up north in Sheffield, and i use trip all the way down to liquid mastering in london just to get my own tunes pressed on dub!
thats whats its all about!
CD DJ'S - HAVE RUINED THE INDUSTRY!
keep it inside, chief.
Yes...unfortunately turntables don't automatically sync and match beats in a point and click style which you can do in most software. You could also have loops and cue points set up perfectly with software to beat juggle. Who wants to see someone do that when it's the software doing most of the work and not the dj? I'd rather see someone physically do that with real objects and their own hands and mind instead of having some 1's and 0's process shit.Slothrop wrote: Sorry, so you're saying that the 'art form of being a DJ' has more to do with carrying heavy boxes and being able to make two records play at the same speed than, say, with tune selection and mixing?
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