![]() You can’t blame them – that kind of gear does, after all, exist (think Stanton SCS.4DJ). They think the “music” is in the “box” – that it’s like a big iPod with controls on it. Initially it’s sometimes hard for people to work out what exactly is happening with a DJ controller and laptop. I don’t understand! Where’s it playing the music from? It’s still the same thing we’re doing.”Ģ. Digital has made it possible to DJ with much more convenient gear – even that same smart phone, in fact! But the skills are still the same. Think of how video cameras have shrunk, or all the things your smartphone can do. What to say: “You know, you don’t really need all that big gear to DJ with. The basic skills of DJing remain the same whether you’re using a €99 Hercules DJControl Instinct or a full-blown Pioneer DJM-2000s-plus-club-mixer set-up. The fact is, though, playing with it most definitely isn’t like playing with a toy. Let’s be honest, though, much DJ gear – even the good stuff – does look like home versions of the “real thing”. Likewise, Traktor gear like the Kontrol S4 looks kind of professional, with its sober styling and jogs relegated to the back of the units. Nobody could accuse the larger-form DJ controllers like the Numark NS6 or the Pioneer DDJ-T1 and Pioneer DDJ-S1 of being toy-like in these cases, the Numarks are big and heavy, the Pioneers are plastic but at least look like “real” DJ gear. You can avoid this by choosing carefully in the first place. Numark’s big, metal 4Trak, with its angled filter and effects panel and four-channel mixer, is far from a toy, more like a central workstation for a full-on DJ/studio set-up. It doesn’t help the cause when certain gear has lots of flashing lights, and is made of the same plastic as games consoles and other consumer gear. Tiny jogwheels add to the impression (“Aren’t they cute?”) of toy-dom. After all, much DJ gear looks like “real” gear, only smaller. I’ll give both a longer response and a more succinct version, the second being the kind of thing you can get comfortable saying to people in an elevator (or a club washroom!): So we thought today we’d take a look at six of the most popular and prevalent questions and then try to come up with some good responses to them. Of course, not all people are personally offended by digital DJing some are just curious and a bit unbelieving as to what’s possible nowadays. This isn’t right, it’s not DJing, anyone can be a DJ nowadays, there’s no skill in it, you’re taking “our” jobs, you’re cheating. When you respond to their questions with, “I prefer DJing with controllers and laptops,” minds can boggle and mouths gape as the questioners stumbles to grasp the notion of someone who doesn’t use “real” gear.Įventually though, they fire off responses, challenges and proclamations. With its flashing lights and minimalist styling, a controller like the Pioneer DDJ-ERGO-V may not look like it belongs in a DJ booth, but like all digital gear, you still need to know how to DJ in order to perform well on it.Īs I’m sure you’ve seen, eyes raise and questions arise when non-DJs, club promoters or even non-digital DJs see you with your digital DJ controller.
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