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AUSTRALIAN DJ FORUMS

OxyKon

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Everything posted by OxyKon

  1. Scottie: only output i'll need will be for my KRK's, all i'm using it for is my computer that's it Mitch: budget would be no more than $400 i'd say, i don't want to spend too much as i'm already pretty broke for the next couple weeks, but i'm open to everybody's opinions on all products
  2. Hey guys, So I'm moving out of home soon and I need a decent/ but affordable interface for my studio monitors to connect to my Mac Pro for production purposes, does anybody have any recommendations of what I should be looking for and what would be a good product to be looking at. Till now I've always had my computer plugged into the back of my dj mixer and pump the sound out the monitors that way, but my new place the decks will be separated from my computer. Any recommendations would be appreciated, thanks
  3. I need to get myself one of those, nice buy
  4. NO EXCUSES THIS TIME WHALES, GET THOSE MIXES RECORDED
  5. i reckon lets keep it, because the fact that nobody did one
  6. What's up for nek month or should we let this roll over into October?
  7. I'm way to busy to even be looking at music at the moment, way too many things on in preparation to moving house
  8. that's what i thought
  9. You still have till the end of the month, I still need to record mine, I've been so busy with other things though
  10. Very nice work, i'm not even that into acid house but i quite like this
  11. Some of my favourite DnB was made in the early 2000s, This morning I was having my toast and tea and thinking about a new Ableton macro I am making called multiFX which is just a bunch of Reverbs and Delay presets like the old Midiverb and it got me thinking about the studio I have in my basement with a bunch of hardware and no computers apart from an MPC for sequencing. I like to keep a reminder about how fucking hard and annoying it was making music in 2001. I do make tunes down there but I have to set aside a lot of time if I am gonna do it right, the limitations were almost some part of the creativity in a way. Just to rename a sound on an Akai s5000 with no keyboard and a scroll wheel takes a minute, This was down time and on a lot of the great you could not listen to your tune when you were editing a name or parameter. Here is 5 differences to be thankful or perhaps learn from between 2001 and today… 1: Accessability Gear was expensive making it harder to make tunes, You really had to work to get that gear you wanted so bad. There was not so many sample packs and pre made things to get you started. I think we are very lucky no to have so much amazing stuff to work with now with all the pre made drum loops and samples, but is there a chance we could all get lazy and sounding like eachother, instead should we go searching out samples off TV, Youtube and Records. 2: A Sample Basis There was music software for making tunes just on the computer but it was just becoming useable so most people were still on racks and racks of expensive hardware with lots of complications and quirks. you would have to build and learn your system for years. Sampling was a massive part of this. Chopping up sounds endlessly, Finding sounds from here and there and making the whole thing very personal and even funny, I put a sound of my fart in a tune once and then played it out that night and every one was dancing to the sound of my fart. I took a kind of perverse joy in this. 3: Dub Plate Culture The excitement to want to make the next tune must have been electric when you had such a strong Dub plate culture. I feel as if the music was less throw away and tunes would stay with DJs for much longer. I don’t put out every thing I make but I do send out tunes to a lot of my DJ mates and my tunes could be on the underground for months or years or even never see the light of day and get a release and just be in peoples DJ sets, I get a good feeling about art being like appreciated like that. 4: The Internet In 2001 It was a dial up affair and sending tunes via email was still not really possible, you would make your tunes, burn a CD send it to the label and never hear from them again or maybe in 3 weeks or so after you sent it. you had to be damn sure the tunes you were sending were right. There was also no offline bounce and you would have to listen to the whole tune as it played when you were finally done because you were recording it to a DAT tape or CD and if you were using a desk you would not be able to work on the track again so you and to do your remix stems and other stuff them and commit and put it to bed. 5: Key I never even used to think about what key a tune was in back in 2001. Nowadays it seems that tracks have much more in tune samples and sounds because we are all using software synthesis for a lot of our sounds. Now I am not saying weather it is better to have things more of less in tune but I know that back in day you could mix a lot of tunes with lots of others and they just would kinda mix and not clash even if they were not in the same key. Souce
  12. Watch out Craze, she's coming for your record
  13. Test test That also worked from tapatalk
  14. Test that worked, safari
  15. hey dude, any information you can give about the location (city) of where the party is held will better talk to the people in those surrounding areas and they then might be able to help
  16. seems to working fine on my end edit. As i posted this i got the great white wall
  17. Mitch pretty much nailed it. Also a club isn't just going to hear your mix tapes and decide "yeah this guy has skills, lets take off our regular to put him on", it's all about networking, once you're over here, you're gonna have to get in tight with the promoters that run the night that fit your style and hope that they give you a chance.
  18. So post something
  19. That's what they are saying too. TO reflect the changing audio market. ie. More people buying vinyl albums just to listen to rather than DJ's buying singles. however... Still need tonearms etc. Also.. I doubt they will ignore the demand from the DJ market. ^ This, they know how many people out there still prefer Technics over any other turntable for dj'n
  20. i did my entire library about a year ago and it actually took me close to 2 weeks, all i can say is at least you'll feel better at the end of the process
  21. Ok I'm not as anal as what labrat is but along the same lines
  22. I pretty much do the same as Labrat. If you do it from the beginning it's quite easy to then just keep adding tracks to those separate folder when you buy to tunes off of beatport/Juno/iTunes store etc.
  23. The ADJF soundcloud is an unlimited package so you will find a lot of everybody's mixes up their, i haven't kept up on the Saturday sessions in a while, still have plenty more that i need to upload
  24. I might go older and do early 2000's
  25. Go to the ADJF siundcloud, there is a separate page called Saturday sessions
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