Ok hi, ill give you my piece of cents
first of all, dont be ashamed of your equipment, its not about your equipment but about what you do with it.
I know that, but I don't want people to see it and think haha what's that/he must be a shit DJ etc
second: jeah probably rent/lend a soundcard as i heard the mixtracks isnt that good.
third: as you said you play 9-10, id rather go slow, 9-10 is not exactly the time where the dancefloors banging but rather the time people heat up and drink and stuff. so dont go too hard.
This is a big problem, the songs I play are very energetic peak-of-the-night stuff if you know what I mean, mostly trancey dnb so I have no idea what I'm gonna do, people wont really be drunk at 9/10 so they wont be dancing much and this will piss me off
forth: as its more a house club i guess the crowd wont be really keen on hardcore dnb so try to go with some lighter dnb and mix it with house, i surely know id hate to hear dubstep or sth when i go to a club for electro.
dnb is not everyones favorite, so be carefull
Read above, I play lighter, trancey dnb not stuff like spor (although I really like some of his tracks) or current value.
as for mixing techniques: go to youtube theres a vid of ean golden that shows '5 basic transitions' ( or sth like that :P ) its pretty good and shows easy, yet cool transitions.
Yeah, I've seen that, it just seems that I've nearly reached the pinnacle and there's nothing else I can do (I'm not for one second saying I'm amazing, I just mean in terms of what I know/could do) I might push myself and try harder transitions (vocal layering etc) but it's very hard with dnb
So far, thats all i can tell you from my experience
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