Perspective Set-Up (Help Me Cut Costs!!) - Page 2
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  1. #11
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    Quote Originally Posted by foxes View Post
    I would highly suggest you start learning on a laptop first, just so you get in the hang of DJ'ing, I personally did not spend thousands on a set up first because I knew I needed to know 1000000% that I wanted to do this...that was 6 years ago, forward today, I'm opening for one of Hardwells shows in the next couple of weeks, and I started on a latop with virtual dj lol so before you spend, be smart about this cause $5000 is a lot for equipment. Also, you cant just focus on dance music, you will NEVER get noticed because of the high volume of dance DJs right now, I learned how to mix hip-hop and all other genres so that once I wanted to play in clubs, I wasn't limited to one genre. Suggestion: buy a decent priced controller and learn the basics first, HDJ 500 headphones (one of the best headphones, I choose them over the 2000s), some KRK rockits. Start small and build from there
    I appreciate that advice, but I already bought the equipment. I actually got it for about $500 less, and I got the 900nxs DJM and CDJs. This isn't an on-the-spot buy. I'm a college freshman at a big university in a medium-sized city. I've no doubt i'll make the money back within 2 years at most. I've been in contact with several musicians while putting together this buy.

    I'd appreciate it if you'd PM your email so I can chat with you on some other things.

  2. #12
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    Quote Originally Posted by foxes View Post
    I'd rather have a camel
    Camels are at first thought a better purchase, but they are a lot smellier, consume more food, and are one of the most un comfiest animals I think I've ever had the displeasure of riding. Goats on the other hand are just amusing to watch, especially Pygmy ones.

    If I were to spend the amount of money this would like to be a dj guy was too then I would spend less on the mixer and more on animals, this would instantly increase street cred and standing within the edm community as you would not be known as the guy who chucked cake in peoples faces, but goats. Thus making you an instantly better dj.
    Technics 1210 MK2 x 2 / A&H Xone:22 / Shure M35S / Urbanears Zinken / Mukatsuku Record Weights x 2 / Vinyl
    iMac / Ableton Live 8 / Reason / Akai EIE Pro / Adam A5x / Boss BX 800 / Soundcraft EPM6 / MFB 522 / Korg Monotribe / Maschine Mikro MK1 / NI Kontrol X1 MK1 / Akai APC 20 / Novation Remote 25sl Compact

  3. #13
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    I understand that some of what I previously wrote is not grammatically correct but I've had rather a lot to drink.
    Technics 1210 MK2 x 2 / A&H Xone:22 / Shure M35S / Urbanears Zinken / Mukatsuku Record Weights x 2 / Vinyl
    iMac / Ableton Live 8 / Reason / Akai EIE Pro / Adam A5x / Boss BX 800 / Soundcraft EPM6 / MFB 522 / Korg Monotribe / Maschine Mikro MK1 / NI Kontrol X1 MK1 / Akai APC 20 / Novation Remote 25sl Compact

  4. #14
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    Quote Originally Posted by amadeus View Post
    I understand that some of what I previously wrote is not grammatically correct but I've had rather a lot to drink.
    lol I definitely think a goat may catch the EDM communities attention for .5 seconds and then disappear...on a serious note, I do agree with that statement, you dont ever need the best equipment to show your credibility, put a $50 controller in fron of me of me or some CDJ 100s and I'll find a way!

  5. #15
    Tech Guru dj gullum's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by amadeus View Post
    Camels are at first thought a better purchase, but they are a lot smellier, consume more food, and are one of the most un comfiest animals I think I've ever had the displeasure of riding. Goats on the other hand are just amusing to watch, especially Pygmy ones.
    And a goat eats everything .... oh way that a DJ
    DJ setup 1 - Pioneer XDJ-Aero, Pioneer DDJ-SP1, Mixvibes Cross, Macbook Air 13", Pioneer HDJ 2000. DJ setup 2 - NI Kontrol F1, Z1, X1mkII, Traktor Pro2, Macbook Air 13", Pioneer HDJ 2000 w. Production - iMac 21.5", Motu 828x, Icon Qcon Pro + EX, Nektar Panorama P4, Propellerhead Reason, Mashine Mikro(drum programer in Reason)

  6. #16
    Tech Guru deevey's Avatar
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    In my opinion its an insane amount of money to spend if you have no experience DJ'ing

    My Advice:

    • Buy a controller e.g. Pioneer DDJ SR/SX & Laptop



    OR

    • Buy second hand/refurbished gear if you are intent on buying Pioneer - you will lose alot less money if/when you resell it.



    • Rent speakers for the first few gigs or get the organizers to rent them and buy some semi-decent hi-fi speakers or monitors for home practice.


    • EDM is NOT a genre anymore than saying "piano" is a genre, and stating that is a dead giveaway that you really are putting the cart before the horse IMHO


    • +1 on the animals, you can bring a few on stage at festivals and throw them at the crowd instead of cake


    I've no doubt i'll make the money back within 2 years at most.
    Really ? You might be a completely crap dj who doesn't have a note in his head or ability to learn how to program a set properly and as a result never gets booked for a gig, I'm not saying that IS the case, but it might be.

  7. #17
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    Quote Originally Posted by deevey View Post
    In my opinion its an insane amount of money to spend if you have no experience DJ'ing

    My Advice:

    • Buy a controller e.g. Pioneer DDJ SR/SX & Laptop



    OR

    • Buy second hand/refurbished gear if you are intent on buying Pioneer - you will lose alot less money if/when you resell it.



    • Rent speakers for the first few gigs or get the organizers to rent them and buy some semi-decent hi-fi speakers or monitors for home practice.


    • EDM is NOT a genre anymore than saying "piano" is a genre, and stating that is a dead giveaway that you really are putting the cart before the horse IMHO


    • +1 on the animals, you can bring a few on stage at festivals and throw them at the crowd instead of cake




    Really ? You might be a completely crap dj who doesn't have a note in his head or ability to learn how to program a set properly and as a result never gets booked for a gig, I'm not saying that IS the case, but it might be.
    We'll see where it goes. Thanks for the honest opinion.

  8. #18
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    Fosho...

    At least since he's dropped so much money, he'll feel kinda obligated to practice a lot :P

    I've decided to never buy DJ/Production gear new unless I absolutely have to since it loses so much value upon resale.
    Bedroom DJ | Pioneer DJM-800 | Pioneer CDJ2000 and CDJ900-NXS | 2 x Mackie MR8MKII | Sennheiser Amperior

  9. #19
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    This is insane! Spending that much having never DJ'd and on the assumption you will like it, be good at it and make money off it is mental!

    Most DJs take at the very least months, if not years to get good enough to play at venues so your 2 year assumption is VERY unrealistic and unlikely. That is if you actually like it, stick with it and put in the graft needed to learn a new instrument and approach to music. Add on top of that the fact that most DJs end up playing for free a lot initially in order to build up the rep to get paid gigs, which can take months, even for well rehearsed and quality DJs. And, when you do get paid gigs it ain't gonna be superstar headline sets, but more likely to be lowly paid intro slots for other local DJs who have more rep and are more trusted to bring in punters than yourself, as that is the important criteria for venue owners.

    It is hard graft, and your entire thread posts is the problem with today's DJs, thinking that buying top end gear will make you an instant superstar DJ able to demand hundreds or thousands per gig immediately. There will be people out there using Numark Mixtrack Pro's that will be better DJs than you and getting better paid gigs than you. Being a DJ isn't about gear. It is about understanding music and how to sequence and programme a series of well chosen tracks that punters will eat up and enjoy. As long as you know how to do this, you can be successful whatever gear you use and to learn this trade is a long old journey that never really ends, even if you do get them big superstar DJ gigs.

    Going straight to the deep end with grand assumptions is not only sheer absurdity, but will probably lead to you not sticking with it due to unreal expectations and giving up in the not too distant future. When you do quit, feel free to give me first dibs on some of your gear for about quarter of what you paid!

    If you do stick with it, however, good luck to you and enjoy!

  10. #20
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    Quote Originally Posted by MartinVasa View Post
    This is insane! Spending that much having never DJ'd and on the assumption you will like it, be good at it and make money off it is mental!

    Most DJs take at the very least months, if not years to get good enough to play at venues so your 2 year assumption is VERY unrealistic and unlikely. That is if you actually like it, stick with it and put in the graft needed to learn a new instrument and approach to music. Add on top of that the fact that most DJs end up playing for free a lot initially in order to build up the rep to get paid gigs, which can take months, even for well rehearsed and quality DJs. And, when you do get paid gigs it ain't gonna be superstar headline sets, but more likely to be lowly paid intro slots for other local DJs who have more rep and are more trusted to bring in punters than yourself, as that is the important criteria for venue owners.

    It is hard graft, and your entire thread posts is the problem with today's DJs, thinking that buying top end gear will make you an instant superstar DJ able to demand hundreds or thousands per gig immediately. There will be people out there using Numark Mixtrack Pro's that will be better DJs than you and getting better paid gigs than you. Being a DJ isn't about gear. It is about understanding music and how to sequence and programme a series of well chosen tracks that punters will eat up and enjoy. As long as you know how to do this, you can be successful whatever gear you use and to learn this trade is a long old journey that never really ends, even if you do get them big superstar DJ gigs.

    Going straight to the deep end with grand assumptions is not only sheer absurdity, but will probably lead to you not sticking with it due to unreal expectations and giving up in the not too distant future. When you, feel free to give me first dibs on some of your gear for about quarter of what you paid!

    If you do stick with it, however, good luck to you and enjoy!
    Appreciate it.

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