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Samination
Advanced Member
    

 Sweden
13,241 posts Joined: Jul, 2004
195 hardcore releases
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Posted - 2013/09/11 : 03:00:19
quote: Originally posted by Warnman:
To my opinion the biggest problem (I'm no DJ!!!) in mixing New School and Old School is that a lot of tracks havn't been released what you'd probably call "DJ-friendly" including long intros and outros. But the DJs in the past have solved this problem by simply doing quick and radical transitions into the following tracks without a long period of teasing moments. It should be practicable! NekoShuffle was able to do handle this as well...
say what? Most of my older tracks has ridicioulsy longer intros and outros compared to alot of newer
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Samination, Swedish Hardcore DJ
Happy, UK Hardcore, Freeform, Makina and Gabber
http://samination.se/ ---------------------------------------------
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Captain Triceps
Advanced Member
    

 United Kingdom
2,211 posts Joined: Dec, 2011
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Posted - 2013/09/11 : 08:25:57
quote: Originally posted by Samination:
quote: Originally posted by Warnman:
To my opinion the biggest problem (I'm no DJ!!!) in mixing New School and Old School is that a lot of tracks havn't been released what you'd probably call "DJ-friendly" including long intros and outros. But the DJs in the past have solved this problem by simply doing quick and radical transitions into the following tracks without a long period of teasing moments. It should be practicable! NekoShuffle was able to do handle this as well...
say what? Most of my older tracks has ridicioulsy longer intros and outros compared to alot of newer
I were wondering about that too, most new tracks have very short intros compared to the older days of hardcore. In fact more are available as 'radio edit' now then there ever were, unless you're counting those commercial rave anthems CDs on Ministry of Sound and the like.
If you mean UK/happy hardcore then there have always been mixable intros, at least in the vast (VAST!!) majority of cases.
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Some of my remixes, original tracks and mixes here:
https://soundcloud.com/bradders-tracks-and-remix https://soundcloud.com/bradders1982 https://soundcloud.com/paulbradley1982
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Warnman
Advanced Member
    

 Germany
2,677 posts Joined: Jun, 2010
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Posted - 2013/09/11 : 19:08:15
quote: Originally posted by Captain Triceps:
quote: Originally posted by Samination:
quote: Originally posted by Warnman:
To my opinion the biggest problem (I'm no DJ!!!) in mixing New School and Old School is that a lot of tracks havn't been released what you'd probably call "DJ-friendly" including long intros and outros. But the DJs in the past have solved this problem by simply doing quick and radical transitions into the following tracks without a long period of teasing moments. It should be practicable! NekoShuffle was able to do handle this as well...
say what? Most of my older tracks has ridicioulsy longer intros and outros compared to alot of newer
I were wondering about that too, most new tracks have very short intros compared to the older days of hardcore. In fact more are available as 'radio edit' now then there ever were, unless you're counting those commercial rave anthems CDs on Ministry of Sound and the like.
If you mean UK/happy hardcore then there have always been mixable intros, at least in the vast (VAST!!) majority of cases.
Yes, I was talking regarding my to my definition of old-school which was very commercial. I know that NekoShuffle had mentioned the same problem with such radio edits or even the extended mixes in the past.
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Ravers unite!
"Happy Hardcore: Love it... hate it... it's fun!" (Matt Stokes)
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Connormgs
Junior Member
 

 United States
92 posts Joined: Jan, 2012
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Posted - 2013/09/12 : 04:21:31
quote: Originally posted by latininxtc:
yea it's not hard at all a good number of mixes do it successfully. How long is your set? the longer the set, the easier it is.
One hour.
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