This is on Funnyjunk's frontpage. Anyone ever do this? Or know anybody that did? Discuss. :P
Also, this post's source is an article from June in 2010.
This is on Funnyjunk's frontpage. Anyone ever do this? Or know anybody that did? Discuss. :P
Also, this post's source is an article from June in 2010.
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SKRILLEX IS THE BEST TECHNO DJ EVER!!! (╯°□°)╯︵ ┻━┻
Iv seen it being done quite a bit but never attempted it. The life in those copies are not very long either but good if you wanted to keep an original or something.
lmao this is awesome
Production: HP G62 2.6 dual core, 8gb ram | Live 8 | APC40 | MPD32 | MPK Mini | NI A2 | KRK Rokit 6 G2s | 6pack of Rolling Rock
DJ: Kontrol X1 | TP2
Excuse my ignorance, but does reproducing the grooves on the original vinyl actually reproduce the sounds?
356 reasons why
Trademark G did this same thing but he actually made records out of ice. The record played for about 20 seconds before melting.
And yes reproducing the groove is all you need to do; the sound is purely based on the shape of the groove. You can play records without any electricity at all.
"Art is what you can get away with." - Marshall McLuhan
I would never get a chance to play any chocolate records, they would all get eaten by the time I get to the gig![]()
"Wow! I wanna be just like your friend! Thats honestly what i told my mom and dad when i was about 11 years old...i said when i grow up i wanna dj for rich people"
It is literally etched into the grooveThe sound is produced by the needle vibrating in the groove; the groove is a literal representation of the soundwaves. If you really want to kick it old school read this: http://memory.loc.gov/ammem/edhtml/edcyldr.html
"Art is what you can get away with." - Marshall McLuhan
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