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New Mix Up For Download

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elcapitan:
I stayed home on Friday night, to get my engineering assignment started. Naturally, I ended up drinking gin 'n tonic and recording a mix. 70-odd minutes of low-tempo party breaks, with the emphasis firmly on party. (Ain't no Si Begg-style stuff in here). So, here it is,

Kid Kenosha - You Never Did Mix (Hi-Fi) (69:18, 192Kbps MP3, 96.1MB zipped) (for people who like sound quality)
Kid Kenosha - You Never Did Mix (Lo-Fi) (69:18, 128Kbps MP3, 64.4MB zipped) (for people on slow connections or with bandwidth quotas)

The tracklisting is as follows:

1. Mr Oizo - Flat Beat
2. Azzido Da Bass feat. Digitalism - Strobelightz (Disko Blitzer Remix)
3. Gorillaz - Feel Good Inc. (Stanton Warriors Remix)
4. Plump DJs - Electric Disco (D. Ramirez Remix)
5. Meat Katie & Elite Force - The Fabulous Mint 400 (Paul Woolford Mix)
6. Fatboy Slim - Star 69 (Audio Bullys Remix)
7. Mr Reds vs. DJ Skribble - Everybody Come On (Stanton Warriors Remix)
8. Ferry Corsten feat. Guru - Junk (D. Ramirex Remix)
9. M.I.A. - Bucky Done Gun (Nudisco On Acid Remix)
10. Mason - Exceeder (DJ Fex Remix)
11. Amiel - Be Your Girl (Bass Kleph Club Mix)
12. Krafty Kuts - Bass Phenomenon (feat. Tim Deluxe)
13. Layo & Bushwacka! - Love Story (Bushwacka! Remix)

Comments? Hatred? Orgasms? Please tell me.

KharBevNor:
I'm going to download this, simply because I have never heard a DJ set before and want to know what it actually entails.

salada:
honestly? you can't be serious. surely you'd have heard some EBM / darkwave sets in your time at least? industrial stuff gets used in dj sets a bit too, no? i know you live on a deserted island, but still...

anyway, seems like a solid mix elcap. i'm not one for breaks much -- but the opener is a sentimental favourite and i quite liked the acid edge on the meat katie (?) track.

and hey, what are you mixing on/with?

elcapitan:
My computer. Specifically, Traktor v3.1.1.

I'm thinking very hard about buying a pair of decks. Computer DJing is more precise, certainly, but things are still released on vinyl for the most part, and there's the whole back catalogue issue. Also, using turntables is so much more tactile - although I'm very good with computers, I still like having physical knobs and buttons to push.

Plus turntables are just so much sexier.

KharBevNor:

--- Quote from: salada on 14 Oct 2006, 05:34 ---honestly? you can't be serious. surely you'd have heard some EBM / darkwave sets in your time at least? industrial stuff gets used in dj sets a bit too, no? i know you live on a deserted island, but still...

--- End quote ---

I went to an 'EBM night' once, but that was mainly just a guy queueing Apoptygma Berzerk and old KMFDM tracks off a CD. I've no idea even of any names of people who are famed for playing industrial/ebm music, except maybe that Jet guy who runs Vampirefreaks. I've been to regular clubs once or twice, obviously, but I don't really attention to the music except as a beat to dance to, because it's shit. I find the whole notion of named DJs in this sense vaguely stupid anyway, though I suppose I see why it's a good idea in the club setting, just not sure I'd ever really choose to download a set and listen to it at home (why would I when I can just drop my favourite tracks on a playlist?) I just want to see how the sets mixed together. I'm listening now, problem is, I don't know any of the songs. Is it just crossfades/drop ins between the tracks, or are two tracks being played at once, or are you shifting in and out between two tracks? I really can't tell.   

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