yossarian_is_sane!
Bluelighter
- Joined
- Jul 12, 2006
- Messages
- 944
i think the main difference, at least for me, between someone spinning vinyl vs cd vs software is that from an audience standpoint, a person spinning vinyl has the appearance that they are doing more. they appear to have a more active involvement in their set, where as someone who spins on cd can do a whole set without ever changing a cd. someone with software just looks like they are clicking buttons on a computer. even if what they are doing is very complex, it doesnt appear that way to the audience. its about showmanship. a set can sound amazing on any medium, but if the DJ appears to be doing nothing much besides clicking with a mouse, it IMO, kills the energy in the room. vinyl feels more hands on when mixing, and it is much more entertaining to watch a great dj tear it up on vinyl as opposed to cd or software. just my opinions as a fan and a dj
Yeah that is a point. However it really does depend on the DJ. I've seen a few Ableton sets where the DJ is jumping about like a mad cunt and everyone gets into it.
CD's... most experienced DJ's wont burn as MP3, you get too many issues with banged up CDJ's or non-compatability (say if the club has 1000 MK2's), so there is generally a fair amount of movement.
I haven't seen an international act use vinyl (excepting Traktor Scratch/Serato) in a long long time. Breaks, DnB, Trance, Techno, you name it. Last one I can recall was Teebee using a single record for scratching. Oh yes, Chase & Status two years ago was the last time I saw a set on vinyl. (and that was after the airline lost their record bag for a good 2 days, lol)