DJ Swamp skipless scratch records. the one on (our) left is just guitar tones, the one on the right is just beats. literally anyone with zero DJing/scratching experience and those two records could do exactly that within 5 minutes of trying.
Originally Posted By SCREWHEAD
DJ Swamp skipless scratch records. the one on (our) left is just guitar tones, the one on the right is just beats. literally anyone with zero DJing/scratching experience and those two records could do exactly that within 5 minutes of trying.
honnestly... I'd love to see any talented dj on this board do something decent with those records (let alone do exactly the same thing) with 5 days of practice...
I understand the concept of how the records work but the eq'ing, cutting and how precise and on time he is when dropping the needle
anyways... I like this guy:
Originally Posted By RAWALI
honnestly... I'd love to see any talented dj on this board do something decent with those records (let alone do exactly the same thing) with 5 days of practice...
I understand the concept of how the records work but the eq'ing, cutting and how precise and on time he is when dropping the needle
Originally Posted By RAWALI
I understand the concept of how the records work but the eq'ing, cutting and how precise and on time he is when dropping the needle
You don't have to be precise or on time dropping the needle on those records. They're 100% skip-proof. Imagine the record has, say, 15 'tracks'. Each "track" is one drum loop over and over and over.. Only it's not just "a drum loop", but it's a loop that lines up throughout the WHOLE record; the kicks, snares, hats, etc, line up through every single track. If you put one of those records on and then just randomly flicked the needle up and down, it would never, ever, EVER go out of beat, you'd just have really horrible needle-scratch noises every time you'd flick it.
these: [ www.undergroundhiphop.com ]
It's similar to the Q-bert Y scratch record, but only with beats. Literally anyone with zero turntable/turntablism experience can do the "perfect" needle-dropping on the beat like this guy did, and the guitar tone record is the same. I don't remember what the name of it is, but it's a two-pack - each record has one side that's a full octave, separated into 13 tracks of about 45 seconds each, and the other side is a major or minor chord/tone progression, split the same way.
Minus the actual fader-skills and EQing, literally anyone with the right two records can do what this guy did on their first day with turntables.