How you can make your mix sound much louder without distording the music because I hear some mixes on the ddj 400 that are not to loud than when I hear it on ddj 1000 for example.
what do you think we did before we had EQ's? your probably a bit too young to remember!!! my b2b buddy always drops a bass, I pretty much always keep both in, even keeping 4 bass's up playing acid techno on a big sound system!
The low EQ trick is so important for seamless transitions. I've been using all three frequency levels for long transitions. It really helps smooth over the jump from once track to another if there's a difference in intensity. The two channel volumes can also act as a crossfader with a bigger range than the crossfader itself.
Additional tip: Try to never fully cut your low frequencies of a track (lower knob) always leave a few db remaining, your mixes will sound way more professional, as fully cutting low also will impact other sections beside the bass and kickdrums.
Don't really agree with this at all. All you're doing is increasing the risk of frequency cancellation, which is going to sound muddy and flat. Fully killing the outgoing low end allows the new bassline to hit hardest.
same here! been a bedroom for 9/10 years so not experienced outside but same applies! the beat grid effect is the worst I've heard from new DJ using virtual DJ, remember smooth is better, the more going on and smooth the better it sounds
I am 6 months in and am ASTONISHED at how many DJs dont get this... I literally never made this mistake. It must be stated that if you just have ad libs on one song, you can mix those with full vocals of another song, but must be VERY careful doing that. I had a head start because I have created music for years and I understand how music works because I have always listened to music closely... just like a movie...i hate when I play a song in the car and someone starts talking through the whole thing... i am also astonished at the amount of people who want to become a DJ, but have lived their lives NOT listening CLOSELY to music... they just think they can pick good music but in reality, they dont know music very well...those people need in person mentors, not online tutorials... i was able to pick it all up by attending youtube university, because I went to hard knock music university my whole life. Becoming a DJ has been the most fulfilling decision I have ever made and my career is very much in its infancy. The view is that the world has a surplus amount of DJs...while that may be true... i find most people who call themselves DJs dont know a lick about DJing...I lost my first residency to a "veteran DJ" that I actually happen to know...the man had never touched a turntable or a dj controller... mouse and keyboard and dj software... i only lost my gig to him because he had been a dj at this bar for over a decade, the owner fired him and hired me and then sold the bar... he then went to the new bar owner and offered to DJ for half the price. It wasnt personal on his part, he loves that gig. I dont blame him... but the novice bar owners are in for some shit lol. They had 0 clue or respect for what I do... most of their guests were amazed I was so new to DJING...because I DJ like someone with 5 years experience. But that's hard to market when you dont actually have 5 years experience... guess its time to start recording and posting my mixes because I have visited the clubs in my area and my god are the DJs struggling here... but I dont want to be arrogant and try to take one of their jobs when I have no content to showcase to potential clients... i have only recorded one mix because I had a steady gig until 2 weeks ago lol. Sorry... i turned this into a therapy session. Im really just affirming what I need to do so I can get back on the saddle. I cant go back to 9 to 5 work after years of music production and now DJing... i live and bleed music.... ok now Im pumped!
People need to understand what red lining does to the equipment. It's hard to do without a picture but I'll try. Music is a sign wave, the spikey jumpy line you see in some software. If you think about one of the peaks and zoom into it you should see a sharp point at the top of the peak. Now draw a horizontal red line half way up the spike. What you have is a hill with a flat top this is called clipping. It is this flat top that does the damage. If you red line all the peaks you end up with a constant voltage, direct current (DC) Putting a DC voltage through the PA overheats the speaker coils, saturates the power transmitters in the amp and will also sound really distorted. For the best sound and long life of your PA, the red line should always be above the highest peak in the sign wave. Even a short time in the red can damage the PA. If it is peaking into the red back it off. Red line = Clipping, Clipping = DC. DC is bad news in a PA from the mixer to the speakers, it's an expensive lesson to learn.
I've always found that certain songs have odd peaks in drops or buildups that enter into the red zone for very short amounts of time, but overal aren't red at all. Recently, in a mix, I left it that way, because turning it down would be noticeable since the volume of the overal mix would suddenly decrease. I'm pretty sure this is completely fine, right?
Great tips! The one about phrasing is truly core to DJing. The real lesson though, is how to recover when you've made that mistake. A lot of DJing is about smudging the mistakes so they aren't noticeable. You can use the jog wheel to "catch up" the cue track to the start of the bar, or find another entry point ~ 4/8/16 bars away.
I think bars/sentences/phrases for a beginner is key to understanding how to DJ. For most who enter the realm of DJing they have no clue of how to read a track and how to match how a track will change and break when layered/mixing. Essential stuff
7:30 one note I'd add is OVERUSE the effects while practicing helps to get better at applying them in a mix. But aye, definitely GREAT advice here, "sparingly" for sure (helps make you think and consider more where using xfx, making for a better quality project output) Loved the vid, love music. Music is such a key part of life, keeps me here and existing. ~a random canadian viewer
This is super helpful, thank you! After a decade of being a DJ agent I decided to buy decks and give it a crack myself and your videos have helped me nail the basics 100%.
Phrasing is the most important. 1 thing I would add (which was pretty much explained) is if you missed the drop, knowing your bar counts where to come in next and not just any spot. Knowing my bar counts and being able to read wave forms was game changing for me.
I enjoy these videos. As a 2 year DJ, you always want to go back to see if you are following the basics. The 5 mistakes you pointed are the ones upstart DJs will make and as the saying goes practice makes perfect.
Here's something to try. You've playing long enough you may be able to do this if your ears are trained enough. This is a more advanced technique but you'll get it once your ears are trained to hear chords. Just keep in mind this ONLY works with songs that have complimentary or identical chords though. Not the songs key the songs chords. Ok so set the song about to come in at -20% bass before you play it. Start the incoming song at a smidge higher than half way up, 4 or 5 lines on your mixers channel fader graph. Drop the playing song to -5 bass the second the incoming song starts and then continue to drop the bass by 5 every line you move up with the incoming song until the incoming song is one line from the very top. Stop bringing the incoming song in 1 line before maximum channel fader volume. By this point both songs should be at -20 bass. Then when you're ready to swap the playing song for the incoming song lower the playing song 1 line and slam the incoming song all the way up to the top of the channel fader. By doing things this way you can prevent any tonal change in the audio of the songs and make it sound like there was no change in the basslines because the two will fluidly swap the places of each other. You also won't end up with too much volume since you've dropped the bass enough to lower the volume of each song so you won't clip if you're recording or using a live setup with compressors or limiters. So no more loud spot in your mix from clashing songs.
@@djluminol it works, but I prefer the Camelot wheel, I first started producing music and then I’m also djing so, the “music theory part” is really covered on my side
Easy with that genre! Hip hop is very challenging to find a break in a track or no vocals as why a lot of DJs use drop mixing or using effects now. If your software supports Stems now that is a game changer and the process has become a whole lot easier.
The mixer I learned on didn't have eq on it, done my nut in hearing the double beat/ echo like noise, just had to fade in/out quickly so that you couldn't hear it.
Just my two cents worth; “Practice, make mistakes, learn and correct them, then hone your skills at home as much as possible. This’ll minimize mistakes on your actual live gigs or performances.” Your sets will never be perfect as there will always be something new to learn every single time you play but they’ll be better. Lastly, get to know your tracks -by heart if you will, that way you won’t have to guess on your transitions. Each of your sets will sound like one long amazing track as opposed to one that’s just filled with mixed nuts. Yes, people do notice! ✌🏼
in the battle of live creativity there can always be mistakes. you can do perfect mixes always only if you script them before and then play down your set. but if you really get new ideas during ur sets and create new life mashups whatever i think its close to impossible to be always perfect.
@@yell0w989 I ordered one a few weeks back and had to send it back cause the Fader Cut Lag was offset, left side sharp cuts, right side noticeably less so sadly. Great controllers for sure but 90% of it is the functionality of the Software they are controlling
@@yell0w989 I had an Hercules dj control instinct p8 😳 now a upgrade to my ddj400 but there not much difference between ddj 1000 it just bigger still a cool controller doe ngl
Thank you so very much, I always felt a gap on my mixing and I didnt know how it was called or how to recognize it, now I know it was all about the phrasing thank you so much!!!
Amused to find not a single person saying “If you’re not redlining, you’re not headlining” in a single headline. 🤣👍🏻 Great stuff, gang. Thank you for these key and professional tips. Can’t wait to truly dig into the real meat & potatoes of learning my way around this art. Keep ‘em coming!
As a beginner I made a mistake watching all those boiler room sets and thinking people would react the same. When I got the first gig, all hyped up, I saw the crowd leaving the dancefloor. You have to play in front of people to really understand of what works when.
For tip 1: Not sure which DJ said it (maybe even you yourself?), but one thing I remember was: "Make sure to create sonic space before mixing", which is exactly what you demonstrated here with the EQs.
Great video mate I learned all of this through trial and error back in my teenage days when I had pioneer cdj 800s and figured it out but really detailed explanation for beginners 👌 love your channel
for whatever reason, straight bass swaps don’t work and sound off on certain tracks. DJ Sneak is worth a watch as he does have both sets of drums in at the same time, not at full but at 10 O clock or 9 O clock on one track and 12 O clock on the other. just comes down to preference and have fun finding out.
Thanks 🙏🏾 it’s the basics but we always need to be reminded, we can get carried away with thinking we’re being different when we’re actually breaking some rules.
And that’s the moment where you need to catch your thoughts and remind yourself that in music, there are no rules. It’s only guidelines. If you think something “breaks a rule”, but you think it sounds amazing, fuck it! You’re in control. Have fun and do what you think sounds good. Always trust your ears over anything else
As a 26 year veteran who uses an sb3 (just cause I already owned Serato Pro and prefer the software), who bought turntables in 95 (they need a refurbish to get back to work, if so), I can honestly say you actually don't need more than that to learn what it takes to go up on a booth. Of course, the other part of being on a booth is handling with people and improvising on several ways (I e. Even the look you make when you shamefully stop the wrong deck matters A LOT to how people are gonna react from the stop, trust me!)
Redlining is probably the most common issue that i see in djs, including beginners and veterans. Even they don't know what redline means and that's why some djs burn speakers
in jump up DnB mixing i find myself breaking this rule quite often if it find two tracks that fit together perfectly, not really beacuase the low ends fit but the low ends drop out at perfect times so i dont have to worry about it
DnB can be very forgiving due to it's chaotic nature (also a lot more fun to mix if you have ADHD...it is the favored music of the Brain Squirrels, after all).
Really nice video! Learned most of this myself just with VirtualDj and I'm happy about it. Gives me a little more confidence and the will do keep on learning.^^ But damn I need to get my self a real DJ mixer. Just using the EQ on both channels is not possible with software. Sure I can make it work as well but not as clean an nice as just with two physical "buttons".
back then I did a mix set with FL Studio, using automated knobs for eq and volume, chopping the tracks as cue points. btw VDJ is a great software, just get a controller, I recently bought an SB3 and I'm having fun.
@@timeless8089 Got myself an Pioneer XDJ XZ now and well it is something really different to work with actual hardware.^^ Way more possibilities and more fun. I think I will spend the extra money for VDj cause it just seems so much better than RekordboxDj and Serato at least for my taste.^^
That last tip is very dependent on your style of mixing. For example, Caribbean styles often rely heavily on effects. It sounds jarring of you're not used to it, but if that is the style you're used to, it will sound empty without it.
Have to disagree on the redlining tip (If playing on a DJM mixer/CDJs) It has an internal limiter and a bunch of headroom (around +18db) Most clubs running a Pioneer mixer know people will redline and have their club systems set up so you actually *have* to redline in order to achieve a loud volume. It generally won't start clipping until the second or third red bar. Also, if every DJ on the lineup is redlining (and the club is set up to handle that) if you start playing and *don't* redline your mix will be MUCH quieter than everyone elses. So i guess it entirely depends on the venue, but I've seen even *Carl Cox* and many others redline their entire set.
with algoriddim djay vocal clashing is not a problem: if an unwanted vocal is coming, I’ll totally cut it thanks to Neural Mix so that it doesn’t ruin the overall mix
@Edwin it actually splits the layer of the track. so the low knob is for drums, the mid knob is for harmonics and the high knob is for vocals. this way you can literally create instrumentals or acapellas in 1 second while you’re mixing. Hope sooner or later it will get implemented everywhere
You most certainly can mix tracks without zeroing out one bass. The only time you want to cancel ome bass out is IF it sounds muddy. It doesn't always create mud.
great video I would say for getting started keeping vocals away from each other completely is a good idea however expert DJs are able to fit vocals into each other and do this really well I have heard top dis like Dave Clarke, Carl Craig Richie Hawtin etc do this but these guys are real masters so I think it will take a long time for people to get good enough to be able to fit vocals together
Those BPM counters. Its like playing air guitar compared to mixing on vinyl. Tip #1. Learn to mix on vinyl first or you'll get bored real quick, and it becomes an expensive hobby until you sell off your gear. Standing there staring, waiting until you can press the que button again. Maybe you could learn how to dance love hearts behind the decks and pretend to make the drops faking on the EQs. Ready for the big stage.
I've been DJing for years and I feel like I'm the only person who strictly uses the crossfader for mixing; not sure if it's a bad habit that must be corrected. Are there any noticeable/audible differences when strictly using the crossfader to mix rather than using the channel faders?
I think the main difference is that the crossfader, as a single control point for the volume of each track in the mix, gives you less fine control: more of track 1 means less of track 2, and vice versa. On the other hand, mixing using each volume fader let's you control how heavy in the mix each channel is independently. When you further incorporate the eq's, you just have many more control points for the mix and you can more subtly tweak how prominent each part of each track is in the mix. If you're going to have a long drawn out transition with both tracks still in, then granular control over the sound profile and volume of each track will allow for a much cleaner mix than if you're limited to just the single slider of the crossfader
Did you start djing back in the early to mid 90's? I've noticed that method of mixing was a lot more common back then. There's nothing inherently wrong or bad about it you just have less fine control is all. As for your question yes there is audible difference. As I stated the fine control you lose using a cross fader makes your track slam in and out more noticeably. With the channel faders you have around an inch of fade potential on each track. Using a crossfader means you typically have about 1/4-1/2 and inch of real world fader travel in or out. Channel faders allow you double or three times that range of fade so you can get cleaner mixes. It depends on what you play too though. They're fine for quick mix styles of music like pop or hip hop. Crossfaders are good to use with electronic music when you have your channel fader about half way up. Slam the fader in so the incoming song becomes audible at exactly the right moment in the songs phrasing. That way you don't make the incoming song audible to the audience on the 14th beat even if you brought the song in on the right beat. Beyond that and scratching crossfaders are pretty useless imo.
This channel is called "Crossfader" but I've never seen him touch it yet. I also learned to DJ in the 90's and using the crossfader is fine. It just gives you punchier mixes rather than slow blends.
Interesting you talk about not having the low eq together. When I started out djing doing that’s how you mix two tracks together, find the beat and line the other up and then bring it in over the top. Why is that a mistake??
Playing two tracks with the bass turned up usually overloads the speakers and causes redlining or clipping. We always teach removing the low end on one of the tracks (usually the track being mixed in) to allow room in the mix for the tracks to not distort or overload the speakers. It is worth noting that some tracks do allow for this method not to be used though!
hey thanks for video ! it might be a stupid question but... for the phrasing part, the calm moment of the song don't always happend at the same moment no?
so if u miss the drop, could u use a technique that delays the deck that is ahead until they line up? is there even a technique? i don’t even have a dj controller i’m basically just theory crafting
More FREE Beginner DJ Lessons from our courses: bit.ly/2T4fyIj
How you can make your mix sound much louder without distording the music because I hear some mixes on the ddj 400 that are not to loud than when I hear it on ddj 1000 for example.
what do you think we did before we had EQ's? your probably a bit too young to remember!!! my b2b buddy always drops a bass, I pretty much always keep both in, even keeping 4 bass's up playing acid techno on a big sound system!
Can you put a track list up? Or just tell me the song on the clashing vocals bit
The red line is saying that “if you ain’t redlining, you ain’t headlining”
This one made me laugh.... lightweight. ... the truth
Swear that’s the truth that shit was funny af 😂😂💪🏾
LMFAOOOOOOOOOOO
True dat
The low EQ trick is so important for seamless transitions. I've been using all three frequency levels for long transitions. It really helps smooth over the jump from once track to another if there's a difference in intensity. The two channel volumes can also act as a crossfader with a bigger range than the crossfader itself.
Additional tip: Try to never fully cut your low frequencies of a track (lower knob) always leave a few db remaining, your mixes will sound way more professional, as fully cutting low also will impact other sections beside the bass and kickdrums.
depens on how strong the eq works. On pioneer controller you can set how many db u want to recude max. -6 up to infinity
I always thought keeping the knobs at "10 and 2" is idyllic.
@@storah-raw it definlty applies to the preset DJM settings.
Don't really agree with this at all. All you're doing is increasing the risk of frequency cancellation, which is going to sound muddy and flat. Fully killing the outgoing low end allows the new bassline to hit hardest.
Really not a problem with the 4 band EQs of A&H 92s & 96s
I'm a veteran dj and I approve this message, young bucks pay attention!
Same!
Yes I’m guilty of overdoing effects to make it look like I’m doing something !
same here! been a bedroom for 9/10 years so not experienced outside but same applies! the beat grid effect is the worst I've heard from new DJ using virtual DJ, remember smooth is better, the more going on and smooth the better it sounds
I am 6 months in and am ASTONISHED at how many DJs dont get this... I literally never made this mistake. It must be stated that if you just have ad libs on one song, you can mix those with full vocals of another song, but must be VERY careful doing that. I had a head start because I have created music for years and I understand how music works because I have always listened to music closely... just like a movie...i hate when I play a song in the car and someone starts talking through the whole thing... i am also astonished at the amount of people who want to become a DJ, but have lived their lives NOT listening CLOSELY to music... they just think they can pick good music but in reality, they dont know music very well...those people need in person mentors, not online tutorials... i was able to pick it all up by attending youtube university, because I went to hard knock music university my whole life. Becoming a DJ has been the most fulfilling decision I have ever made and my career is very much in its infancy.
The view is that the world has a surplus amount of DJs...while that may be true... i find most people who call themselves DJs dont know a lick about DJing...I lost my first residency to a "veteran DJ" that I actually happen to know...the man had never touched a turntable or a dj controller... mouse and keyboard and dj software... i only lost my gig to him because he had been a dj at this bar for over a decade, the owner fired him and hired me and then sold the bar... he then went to the new bar owner and offered to DJ for half the price. It wasnt personal on his part, he loves that gig. I dont blame him... but the novice bar owners are in for some shit lol. They had 0 clue or respect for what I do... most of their guests were amazed I was so new to DJING...because I DJ like someone with 5 years experience. But that's hard to market when you dont actually have 5 years experience... guess its time to start recording and posting my mixes because I have visited the clubs in my area and my god are the DJs struggling here... but I dont want to be arrogant and try to take one of their jobs when I have no content to showcase to potential clients... i have only recorded one mix because I had a steady gig until 2 weeks ago lol. Sorry... i turned this into a therapy session. Im really just affirming what I need to do so I can get back on the saddle. I cant go back to 9 to 5 work after years of music production and now DJing... i live and bleed music.... ok now Im pumped!
Alkay
People need to understand what red lining does to the equipment. It's hard to do without a picture but I'll try. Music is a sign wave, the spikey jumpy line you see in some software. If you think about one of the peaks and zoom into it you should see a sharp point at the top of the peak. Now draw a horizontal red line half way up the spike. What you have is a hill with a flat top this is called clipping. It is this flat top that does the damage. If you red line all the peaks you end up with a constant voltage, direct current (DC) Putting a DC voltage through the PA overheats the speaker coils, saturates the power transmitters in the amp and will also sound really distorted. For the best sound and long life of your PA, the red line should always be above the highest peak in the sign wave. Even a short time in the red can damage the PA. If it is peaking into the red back it off. Red line = Clipping, Clipping = DC. DC is bad news in a PA from the mixer to the speakers, it's an expensive lesson to learn.
Top notch comment
Superb comment, well explained!
I've always found that certain songs have odd peaks in drops or buildups that enter into the red zone for very short amounts of time, but overal aren't red at all. Recently, in a mix, I left it that way, because turning it down would be noticeable since the volume of the overal mix would suddenly decrease. I'm pretty sure this is completely fine, right?
@@StepwaveMusic Occasional red peaks are inevitable, just be mindful of what is going on, sounds like you are :)
My speakers sound like police sirens now from redlining all night
Great tips! The one about phrasing is truly core to DJing. The real lesson though, is how to recover when you've made that mistake.
A lot of DJing is about smudging the mistakes so they aren't noticeable. You can use the jog wheel to "catch up" the cue track to the start of the bar, or find another entry point ~ 4/8/16 bars away.
Agree recovering from mistakes is key to DJing confidence
Perfectly said
Creating a short loop might work as well!
don't panic and play it cool and no one ever knows.
Or just set cues, mostly did on perform sets. Too time costing.
I think bars/sentences/phrases for a beginner is key to understanding how to DJ. For most who enter the realm of DJing they have no clue of how to read a track and how to match how a track will change and break when layered/mixing. Essential stuff
I check subconsciously
I get the timing though just takes some seconds longer
28 years as a vinyl dj and all the words you speak are true young padwan 👍👍.
7:54 Pretty much the best way to explain what is Sound Voltex
Avoiding clashing vocals is why hip hop remains the hardest genre to mix for me
Same! I’ve started looping the intro of the next track before the vocal kicks in to help mix hip-hop.
@Anthony Zvirblis looping hip hop intro beats is a pretty decent method to allow for mixing in, I do it for edm at times.
As a veteran dj for 12 years. This is some stuff all aspiring dj’s should take note off.
7:30 one note I'd add is OVERUSE the effects while practicing helps to get better at applying them in a mix. But aye, definitely GREAT advice here, "sparingly" for sure (helps make you think and consider more where using xfx, making for a better quality project output)
Loved the vid, love music. Music is such a key part of life, keeps me here and existing.
~a random canadian viewer
This is super helpful, thank you! After a decade of being a DJ agent I decided to buy decks and give it a crack myself and your videos have helped me nail the basics 100%.
Glad we could help!
Phrasing is the most important.
1 thing I would add (which was pretty much explained) is if you missed the drop, knowing your bar counts where to come in next and not just any spot.
Knowing my bar counts and being able to read wave forms was game changing for me.
I enjoy these videos. As a 2 year DJ, you always want to go back to see if you are following the basics. The 5 mistakes you pointed are the ones upstart DJs will make and as the saying goes practice makes perfect.
Here's something to try. You've playing long enough you may be able to do this if your ears are trained enough. This is a more advanced technique but you'll get it once your ears are trained to hear chords. Just keep in mind this ONLY works with songs that have complimentary or identical chords though. Not the songs key the songs chords.
Ok so set the song about to come in at -20% bass before you play it. Start the incoming song at a smidge higher than half way up, 4 or 5 lines on your mixers channel fader graph. Drop the playing song to -5 bass the second the incoming song starts and then continue to drop the bass by 5 every line you move up with the incoming song until the incoming song is one line from the very top. Stop bringing the incoming song in 1 line before maximum channel fader volume. By this point both songs should be at -20 bass. Then when you're ready to swap the playing song for the incoming song lower the playing song 1 line and slam the incoming song all the way up to the top of the channel fader. By doing things this way you can prevent any tonal change in the audio of the songs and make it sound like there was no change in the basslines because the two will fluidly swap the places of each other. You also won't end up with too much volume since you've dropped the bass enough to lower the volume of each song so you won't clip if you're recording or using a live setup with compressors or limiters. So no more loud spot in your mix from clashing songs.
@@djluminol it works, but I prefer the Camelot wheel, I first started producing music and then I’m also djing so, the “music theory part” is really covered on my side
Easy with that genre! Hip hop is very challenging to find a break in a track or no vocals as why a lot of DJs use drop mixing or using effects now. If your software supports Stems now that is a game changer and the process has become a whole lot easier.
Nobody taught me about the basses clashing for years and I finally was watching another DJ in a booth and I saw it and it changed my DJing ENORMOUSLY.
Better late then never haha
The mixer I learned on didn't have eq on it, done my nut in hearing the double beat/ echo like noise, just had to fade in/out quickly so that you couldn't hear it.
Just my two cents worth; “Practice, make mistakes, learn and correct them, then hone your skills at home as much as possible. This’ll minimize mistakes on your actual live gigs or performances.” Your sets will never be perfect as there will always be something new to learn every single time you play but they’ll be better. Lastly, get to know your tracks -by heart if you will, that way you won’t have to guess on your transitions. Each of your sets will sound like one long amazing track as opposed to one that’s just filled with mixed nuts. Yes, people do notice! ✌🏼
in the battle of live creativity there can always be mistakes. you can do perfect mixes always only if you script them before and then play down your set. but if you really get new ideas during ur sets and create new life mashups whatever i think its close to impossible to be always perfect.
Hip-Hop DJs: do not scratch every single song that you play. (Unless you are in a DJ battle.)
True 😂
I swear these videos always pop on my RUclips just when I need it! Beginner DJ here and always saved by Crossfader 😅
Amazing!
Really comprehensive video! Beats, bars and phrases is so so important and often overlooked I think
Thanks. Just started beginning yesterday with DDJ1000 and really can use this
Dude your in for some real fun times :)
i wish i could afford a ddj 1000, I'm here using a Hercules DJControl Inpulse 500
@@yell0w989 I ordered one a few weeks back and had to send it back cause the Fader Cut Lag was offset, left side sharp cuts, right side noticeably less so sadly.
Great controllers for sure but 90% of it is the functionality of the Software they are controlling
@@yell0w989 I had an Hercules dj control instinct p8 😳 now a upgrade to my ddj400 but there not much difference between ddj 1000 it just bigger still a cool controller doe ngl
@@yell0w989 500 is a Solid piece I love every feature it has 😍
Thank you so very much, I always felt a gap on my mixing and I didnt know how it was called or how to recognize it, now I know it was all about the phrasing thank you so much!!!
Advice with Low eq for me was the Best thats made my mix smoother Thank You 🔥👊
Great to hear!
Amused to find not a single person saying “If you’re not redlining, you’re not headlining” in a single headline. 🤣👍🏻
Great stuff, gang. Thank you for these key and professional tips. Can’t wait to truly dig into the real meat & potatoes of learning my way around this art. Keep ‘em coming!
Thanks!
How is it going?
Just beginning
As a beginner I made a mistake watching all those boiler room sets and thinking people would react the same. When I got the first gig, all hyped up, I saw the crowd leaving the dancefloor. You have to play in front of people to really understand of what works when.
For tip 1:
Not sure which DJ said it (maybe even you yourself?),
but one thing I remember was: "Make sure to create sonic space before mixing",
which is exactly what you demonstrated here with the EQs.
Great video mate I learned all of this through trial and error back in my teenage days when I had pioneer cdj 800s and figured it out but really detailed explanation for beginners 👌 love your channel
Thank you so much for this. I am a beginner Dj and appreciate all the tips you have shown.
May I add, learning the differences between gain, trim, level and fader and how to set signal properly for optimal sound quality.
for whatever reason, straight bass swaps don’t work and sound off on certain tracks. DJ Sneak is worth a watch as he does have both sets of drums in at the same time, not at full but at 10 O clock or 9 O clock on one track and 12 O clock on the other. just comes down to preference and have fun finding out.
Thanks 🙏🏾 it’s the basics but we always need to be reminded, we can get carried away with thinking we’re being different when we’re actually breaking some rules.
And that’s the moment where you need to catch your thoughts and remind yourself that in music, there are no rules. It’s only guidelines. If you think something “breaks a rule”, but you think it sounds amazing, fuck it! You’re in control. Have fun and do what you think sounds good.
Always trust your ears over anything else
Ddj 400 is a great controller for beginner!!!
My opinion 😉
As a 26 year veteran who uses an sb3 (just cause I already owned Serato Pro and prefer the software), who bought turntables in 95 (they need a refurbish to get back to work, if so), I can honestly say you actually don't need more than that to learn what it takes to go up on a booth.
Of course, the other part of being on a booth is handling with people and improvising on several ways (I e. Even the look you make when you shamefully stop the wrong deck matters A LOT to how people are gonna react from the stop, trust me!)
@@djbrandao
Ok!!!
How to use effects to create an effective mix and how to use them effectively! Seriously helpful tips!
Redlining is probably the most common issue that i see in djs, including beginners and veterans.
Even they don't know what redline means and that's why some djs burn speakers
in jump up DnB mixing i find myself breaking this rule quite often if it find two tracks that fit together perfectly, not really beacuase the low ends fit but the low ends drop out at perfect times so i dont have to worry about it
DnB can be very forgiving due to it's chaotic nature (also a lot more fun to mix if you have ADHD...it is the favored music of the Brain Squirrels, after all).
Great video! I've been DJing for a while, but it's always good to pick back up on the basics!
I really like the way you teach dude, nice way of breaking it down and explaining each step :)
thanks Jamie. the info is great for me whose just started with my pioneer Dj and rekordbox
you can cut the mids to avoid vocal clash also temp fix
Really nice video! Learned most of this myself just with VirtualDj and I'm happy about it. Gives me a little more confidence and the will do keep on learning.^^ But damn I need to get my self a real DJ mixer. Just using the EQ on both channels is not possible with software. Sure I can make it work as well but not as clean an nice as just with two physical "buttons".
VirtualDJ is the equivalent of mixing one-handed. You're limited to the mouse cursor only. Although, the software itself is still excellent.
back then I did a mix set with FL Studio, using automated knobs for eq and volume, chopping the tracks as cue points. btw VDJ is a great software, just get a controller, I recently bought an SB3 and I'm having fun.
@@timeless8089 Got myself an Pioneer XDJ XZ now and well it is something really different to work with actual hardware.^^ Way more possibilities and more fun. I think I will spend the extra money for VDj cause it just seems so much better than RekordboxDj and Serato at least for my taste.^^
That last tip is very dependent on your style of mixing. For example, Caribbean styles often rely heavily on effects. It sounds jarring of you're not used to it, but if that is the style you're used to, it will sound empty without it.
4:52 I think we can also loop the track which is fading out to fix wrong phrasing
Thank you man👍🏾👏🏾
Have to disagree on the redlining tip (If playing on a DJM mixer/CDJs) It has an internal limiter and a bunch of headroom (around +18db)
Most clubs running a Pioneer mixer know people will redline and have their club systems set up so you actually *have* to redline in order to achieve a loud volume.
It generally won't start clipping until the second or third red bar.
Also, if every DJ on the lineup is redlining (and the club is set up to handle that) if you start playing and *don't* redline your mix will be MUCH quieter than everyone elses.
So i guess it entirely depends on the venue, but I've seen even *Carl Cox* and many others redline their entire set.
Damn that's lazy. Why not just learn proper gain structure?
@@matturner6890 did you read my comment at all? Lol
Gold lesson To the begginers! Please pay atention on this! Congrats for the tips!
with algoriddim djay vocal clashing is not a problem: if an unwanted vocal is coming, I’ll totally cut it thanks to Neural Mix so that it doesn’t ruin the overall mix
@Edwin it actually splits the layer of the track. so the low knob is for drums, the mid knob is for harmonics and the high knob is for vocals. this way you can literally create instrumentals or acapellas in 1 second while you’re mixing. Hope sooner or later it will get implemented everywhere
It's in rekordbox too you just have to pay for the creative paid subscription
Beginner DJ & thanks for the tips
On the first tip, is it okay to leave the low EQ knob in the middle if you just play one song at a time? Let’s use a club as an example.
To be honest i love to mix with both up. I use the eq but not mind at all using bot together.
You most certainly can mix tracks without zeroing out one bass. The only time you want to cancel ome bass out is IF it sounds muddy. It doesn't always create mud.
Sometimes you can get lucky with the phrasing; if bass sounds that occupy the same frequency don’t hit at the same there’s no need to cut the eq
great video I would say for getting started keeping vocals away from each other completely is a good idea however expert DJs are able to fit vocals into each other and do this really well I have heard top dis like Dave Clarke, Carl Craig Richie Hawtin etc do this but these guys are real masters so I think it will take a long time for people to get good enough to be able to fit vocals together
5:55 when this happens I use BEAT SKIP/jump/goto +4 command (once or twice -depends on the unexpected drop)
Great bunch of tips. Thanks
I use all these mistakes on a daily basis and I think they make them great!
YES I RED LINE, BUT I JUST TURN IT DOW IN POST
Menace
ive had that problem of red lining with virtual dj using a numark party mix great tip to avoid it as i use the master to get out the red :)
Very good lessons. i'm still learning how to DJ. And this is very useful
Thanks, the video was very helpful !
Those BPM counters. Its like playing air guitar compared to mixing on vinyl.
Tip #1. Learn to mix on vinyl first or you'll get bored real quick, and it becomes an expensive hobby until you sell off your gear. Standing there staring, waiting until you can press the que button again. Maybe you could learn how to dance love hearts behind the decks and pretend to make the drops faking on the EQs. Ready for the big stage.
Great video, thanks!
All points absolutely spot on 👌👌
Gone for the old skool, vinyl turntables, I'm scared of technology lol, need help lost my ability to mix at the moment, been out the game for 6yrs
Great tips, really helpful for beginners like me. Cheers!
Great video Jamie!
thank you for teaching us!
Redlining is so common, even among pro djs. Just think of the vu metres as a set of traffic lights. Red means stop!
FINALLY SOMEONE WHO TELLS PEOPLE THAT THEY SHOULDN't CLIP
Vewy beautiful important tips. I wus wondering what do you do when you miss the cue. Do you just wait 4 bars till the first change or....what? Thanks
As a beginner dj I want to say that it makes it harder to control the music when some tracks have weird phrasing
I've been DJing for years and I feel like I'm the only person who strictly uses the crossfader for mixing; not sure if it's a bad habit that must be corrected. Are there any noticeable/audible differences when strictly using the crossfader to mix rather than using the channel faders?
I think the main difference is that the crossfader, as a single control point for the volume of each track in the mix, gives you less fine control: more of track 1 means less of track 2, and vice versa. On the other hand, mixing using each volume fader let's you control how heavy in the mix each channel is independently. When you further incorporate the eq's, you just have many more control points for the mix and you can more subtly tweak how prominent each part of each track is in the mix. If you're going to have a long drawn out transition with both tracks still in, then granular control over the sound profile and volume of each track will allow for a much cleaner mix than if you're limited to just the single slider of the crossfader
Did you start djing back in the early to mid 90's? I've noticed that method of mixing was a lot more common back then. There's nothing inherently wrong or bad about it you just have less fine control is all.
As for your question yes there is audible difference. As I stated the fine control you lose using a cross fader makes your track slam in and out more noticeably. With the channel faders you have around an inch of fade potential on each track. Using a crossfader means you typically have about 1/4-1/2 and inch of real world fader travel in or out. Channel faders allow you double or three times that range of fade so you can get cleaner mixes. It depends on what you play too though. They're fine for quick mix styles of music like pop or hip hop. Crossfaders are good to use with electronic music when you have your channel fader about half way up. Slam the fader in so the incoming song becomes audible at exactly the right moment in the songs phrasing. That way you don't make the incoming song audible to the audience on the 14th beat even if you brought the song in on the right beat. Beyond that and scratching crossfaders are pretty useless imo.
This channel is called "Crossfader" but I've never seen him touch it yet.
I also learned to DJ in the 90's and using the crossfader is fine. It just gives you punchier mixes rather than slow blends.
Crossfader super race here as well
Helpful tips! 👍🏼
Thank You, very helpful :)
A really good and practical tips... many thanks.
great vid
Wow I was not aware of any of this. Nice info!
is there a purpose to keeping one track 2 bpm lower instead of just matching?
Thanks for your work!
Nice one 👍👍👍✔️✔️💯
thanks for all these tips man!
Great video thank you!
Excellent!!🔥🎛🔥👍🏼Thank you!!!!
Thanks ❤️ ❤️ ❤️ you are THE 👌 BEST
Loop is my best friend
How do you get rekordbox to look like that
Great video
Interesting you talk about not having the low eq together. When I started out djing doing that’s how you mix two tracks together, find the beat and line the other up and then bring it in over the top. Why is that a mistake??
I think as long as you stick to the same genre and bpm it should be ok, but when you then switch up flow style and bpm then its best to slide it off
Playing two tracks with the bass turned up usually overloads the speakers and causes redlining or clipping. We always teach removing the low end on one of the tracks (usually the track being mixed in) to allow room in the mix for the tracks to not distort or overload the speakers. It is worth noting that some tracks do allow for this method not to be used though!
Simple and very helpful specially for beginner's
hey thanks for video !
it might be a stupid question but... for the phrasing part, the calm moment of the song don't always happend at the same moment no?
Very useful video, thank you so much.
What is that mini blue wave form above each track and how did it get there?
I haven't got the software to use headphones at the same time so iv learned how to read the scrolling beats haha.
thank you for evrything
Great Tips
Thank you
Good explanation thank you :)
Nice video... 👍🏿
Great video ☺️
so if u miss the drop, could u use a technique that delays the deck that is ahead until they line up? is there even a technique? i don’t even have a dj controller i’m basically just theory crafting