grindcore, hardcore... only because its so hard to listen to a whole track cause that music is disgusting LOL. everything is pretty easy after a little practice, but it is always easier if you love what your playing.
Printable View
grindcore, hardcore... only because its so hard to listen to a whole track cause that music is disgusting LOL. everything is pretty easy after a little practice, but it is always easier if you love what your playing.
yup... anything with a live drummer is a bitch to mix. Also some tracks where the backing track is an actual dj rocking doubles... that can be a bitch too.
anything with a 4/4 beat is retarded easy to beatmatch even without headphone and on a traditional vinyl setup with no dvs
I've only had problems with disco/funk, when it was my first time. All you have to do is ride the pitch. This might be a generational gap thing though. For guys who came up on turntables (like myself), that was a normal every gig thing. Hell... anyone who remembers EDM from the late 80's to early 90's knows that analogue drum machines even had a little drift to the sequencing. I can see how if your not used to it, it can seem to be out of left field... especially if you heavily use sync.
What I REALLY find challenging to mix is rock. I just have NO clue how to do it, or how you can make it sound good. That being said, I would never WANT to do it either. lol.
- R&B, 'Urban' and hiphop HAS got a predictable 4/4 structure (normal caveats apply)
- to answer the question;
1) live drummers playing breakbeats
2) live drummers playing 4 on the floor
3) quantised breakbeats
4) everything else
Anything with more than 12% kittens and I'm hopeless. It's becoming more of a problem as pretty much everything has kittens in it thes days.
ambient, alot of electronica and anything not in 4/4 time
Jazz