if you are all over one specific genre it can get tough some months. I tend to flit about a bit, keeps me interested.
Dip in Music Quality
Nah.
Personally thought there was a dearth during the lockdown, but a pickup in quality recently
seanc80 there’s prob a couple of pretty clear reasons for that:
Firstly, if you’re a producer and your track is ‘da bomb’, then why the heck would you release it when most people can’t go to clubs+festivals?.
Secondly, I don’t think the covid lockdown would have been a particularly inspiring time as far as creativity is concerned anyway.
These are bleak times (and God are they bleak) so we should be in for a tune bonanza any time soon.
if you are all over one specific genre it can get tough some months. I tend to flit about a bit, keeps me interested.
This is right. I say as a listener, not someone who djs. Sticking to one genre is something that intensified in the early 2000s by my estimation. I haven’t heard people competently playing cross-genres for years, really.
Not to hark back to the 90s too much, but people’s record boxes were more interesting and spanned more genres than nowadays.
Your not looking hard enough.
I’m thinking about Paul van Dyk tossing Missy Elliot remixes in a set and Pete Tong playing garage tunes. Even though sometimes it sounded shit. Who bothers doing stuff like that nowadays?
Garnier?
Beyond styles, it’s hard enough to get many DJs to waver from the exact same BPM for their entire mix. I know I’ll take some pots and pans over a seamlessly mixed hour that sounds like one long song.
Amps Garnier playing everything and making it somehow sound like it’s from the future.
This.
It’s like “it’s not what he plays, it’s the way he plays it”. I’ve always thought his mixmag cd from 95 is amazing, and sums that statement up.
SM asked where you do your shopping, Sean. A more honest answer would be ‘Dunnes Menswear’
Some decent gear in fairness: