Can somebody please help me find this song?
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- Eurobeat Guru
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- Joined: 17 May 2005, 07:18
- Location: searching for missing Eurogrooves trax
Wow! it's all digitalized nowadays. huh? Sorta takes away the fun of mixing in the first place. At least for me it would. I still think old skool mixing is the best. You can really hear how one song morphs into the other. I remeber thinking parts of one song belong to another and vice vesra when I heard the transitions in the good old days.
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- Euro To B
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[quote="drnrg"]Wow! it's all digitalized nowadays. huh? Sorta takes away the fun of mixing in the first place. At least for me it would. I still think old skool mixing is the best. You can really hear how one song morphs into the other. I remeber thinking parts of one song belong to another and vice vesra when I heard the transitions in the good old days. [/quote
I would do it the traditional way, but I have absolutely no idea how to, nor do I have the equipment for it
I would do it the traditional way, but I have absolutely no idea how to, nor do I have the equipment for it
Check out my work at my Youtube channel:
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCCGsMj ... dXyC1SBn2w
or my sound cloud:
https://soundcloud.com/hiroki-hub
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCCGsMj ... dXyC1SBn2w
or my sound cloud:
https://soundcloud.com/hiroki-hub
- SuperEuroJimmy
- Mudkip Fan
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Well, this is actually the old skool mixing way. The only thing the computes does is transcode the sine wave into the song you're actually playing. :)drnrg wrote:Wow! it's all digitalized nowadays. huh? Sorta takes away the fun of mixing in the first place. At least for me it would. I still think old skool mixing is the best. You can really hear how one song morphs into the other. I remeber thinking parts of one song belong to another and vice vesra when I heard the transitions in the good old days. 8)
The part you're missing here is picking up the vinyl and replacing it with another one. :)
Check this video and it might make some sense; https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-4pkPIFsvgo
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- Euro To B
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- Joined: 24 May 2016, 06:03
- Location: Pennsylvania, United States
Seems to complicated for meMKwiakaku wrote:Well, this is actually the old skool mixing way. The only thing the computes does is transcode the sine wave into the song you're actually playing.drnrg wrote:Wow! it's all digitalized nowadays. huh? Sorta takes away the fun of mixing in the first place. At least for me it would. I still think old skool mixing is the best. You can really hear how one song morphs into the other. I remeber thinking parts of one song belong to another and vice vesra when I heard the transitions in the good old days.
The part you're missing here is picking up the vinyl and replacing it with another one.
Check this video and it might make some sense; https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-4pkPIFsvgo
Maybe I should stick to making mixes the way I have been
Check out my work at my Youtube channel:
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCCGsMj ... dXyC1SBn2w
or my sound cloud:
https://soundcloud.com/hiroki-hub
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCCGsMj ... dXyC1SBn2w
or my sound cloud:
https://soundcloud.com/hiroki-hub
Well, you can still mix the old skool way, you just don't have the vinyl; you're using the mp3 version of the extended. DJs have been doing that since around 1997. Old Skool mixing simply applies to mixing outro/intro.
Today's DJs have no idea of the skill behind mixing, but on the flip side, old skool "vinyl" DJs have no idea of the skill behind working the diverse technological advances of mixers & tracktor controllers.
Today's DJs have no idea of the skill behind mixing, but on the flip side, old skool "vinyl" DJs have no idea of the skill behind working the diverse technological advances of mixers & tracktor controllers.
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- Eurobeat Guru
- Posts: 6957
- Joined: 17 May 2005, 07:18
- Location: searching for missing Eurogrooves trax
No wonder you have all these boatload of deejay's coming out of nowhere. That program makes it soooooooo easy to mix. You don't even have to hassle to sync the correct speeds of each song. If I had that cash I might buy that traktor just to have more options, but I think I still prefer the raw style of vinyl mixing. Old habits die hard.MKwiakaku wrote:Well, this is actually the old skool mixing way. The only thing the computes does is transcode the sine wave into the song you're actually playing.drnrg wrote:Wow! it's all digitalized nowadays. huh? Sorta takes away the fun of mixing in the first place. At least for me it would. I still think old skool mixing is the best. You can really hear how one song morphs into the other. I remeber thinking parts of one song belong to another and vice vesra when I heard the transitions in the good old days.
The part you're missing here is picking up the vinyl and replacing it with another one.
Check this video and it might make some sense; https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-4pkPIFsvgo
Might not want to bother, there seems to be no information at all.Lebon14 wrote:If I get enough cash one day, I'll buy a copy off discogs and find out.para_rigby wrote:What do we know about the studio that produced songs for that album series?
http://postimg.org/image/aj9hvr319/
Heh. Even then, I'll get it coz FLAC and rarity.Markos wrote:Might not want to bother, there seems to be no information at all.
http://postimg.org/image/aj9hvr319/
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