Nice.

-----Original Message-----
From: Brendan Nelson [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: 23 January 2004 11:48 
To: [email protected]
Subject: RE: (313) Ableton Live mixes


Alex Bond wrote:

> so maybe digital dj'ing allows someone to think more about 
> programming than actual mixing (as it's virtually 'automatic') 
> and I think that has to be a good thing. I think?


I'd actually say that digital dj'ing gives DJs the flexibility to choose how
much "automation" they want to use - you're not *restricted* to nicely
automated beatmatching and so on if you don't want to be.

For example, I've been using Ableton heavily for over a year now (having
used it on the Offworld Party Time and All Cylinders mixes, as well as
playing out with it three or four times) and count myself as a pretty
experienced user by now. Recently, however, I played with Final Scratch for
the first time, and it was a major eye-opener. 

It's a different world from Ableton altogether; in the world of Ableton, if
you want imprecision in your mixes, you have to actually *build it in* (do
very minor adjustments to the warp markers etc to give the impression tracks
are drifting subtly in and out of time), which is quite bizarre when you
think about it. However, with Final Scatch, there's really no difference
from vinyl mixing apart from the fact that you can play tracks that only
exist on hard drive as well as tracks that exist on vinyl.

So there's space in the world for both Final Scratch and Ableton Live, but
the two of them represent completely opposite sides of the whole spectrum of
digital mixing. Want to keep the rawness and imprecision of vinyl mixing
without having to break your back carrying records around? Use Final
Scratch. Want to be able to concentrate more on the arrangement, sound and
programming of your mix than on the mechanics of mixing? Use Ableton Live.
Ideally? Use a combination of the two as well as real records (that's my
approach at least!).

All in all, I do think it's a good thing that when a person thinks "I'm
going to do a mix" there are a number of approaches he or she can adopt in
producing that mix; each of which will play to different strengths that DJ
might have, each of which will affect the nature and structure of the mix in
interesting ways. Not all digital DJs will automate their beatmixing and
concentrate more on structure; maybe the key thing to understand about
digital DJing is that it will lead to a whole bunch of people doing a whole
range of different things, a lot of which we can't really predict right now.

Brendan
www.lunarselector.com
www.non-stop-djs.com



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