Hi guys,
I've been listening to a lot of mixes lately from the bass music spectrum and I have a question about the way they mix and how to best emulate it. To characterise the way they mix, I'd say it's thick'n'fast, i.e. introducing the next song very abruptly - as opposed to a long, gradual blend - and driving it straight into the mix with (near) max volume and EQ. This normally comes in at an obvious point in the current song: during a break/bridge or start of a new phrase. I'm wondering how they go about this technically: how do you mix in a next track so quickly on a turntable?
Is this just a matter of turntable/vinyl control? Are they cueing/holding the first-beat on the incoming track and then just slamming the volume all the way up, and timing it perfectly? Because obviously the risk is that if you release the vinyl even half a step off the beat your mistake is immediately going to be max-volume for max dancefloor devastation. Or do you think it's easier to find the cue-point and then go back perhaps 4/8 beats, and bringing it in on time? Because that seems pretty difficult to do - to guess when the current-playing song is 4/8 beats back - especially if it's an acapella section or a break without any bass/kicks to count.
So what's your method? Hopefully you guys know what I'm on about by my vague descriptions. Hard mixing, basically, as opposed to gradual: what's your methods? Any tips? How do you slam in the next track so it immediately has a presence, rather than slowly upping the volume/EQ until it's fully in place? This is something I want (and need!) to practice.
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