DJ duo
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Thread: DJ duo

  1. #1
    Tech Wizard czanier's Avatar
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    Default DJ duo

    Hey guys, just a quick question. I'm currently running a ddj ergo through traktor, and my buddy is running a pioneer s1 through serato, was just wondering if anyone knew of a way we could both mix together using our own setups, and not sounding like an audio mess.

    Thanks!

  2. #2
    Tech Mentor
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    Plug the s1 into the ddj ergo's aux input and play music?

  3. #3
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    Just learn how to balance your sound, theres no one trick to it. Use your gain, your eq, if you're using a mixing board it gets easier to balance your levels. Beat match to each others music, and learn to build routines. I dj with a guy where we often mix three or four songs and pass it back and forth. It's a great way to flex some of the djing skills that go unused in the controllerist scene.
    VCI-100se1.3 & Kontrol F1 & Midi Fighter Classic & Traktor Audio 2 & Pioneer HDJ-1000 & Compaq Presario CQ62
    http://www.facebook.com/DjFrostGiant
    http://www.mixcloud.com/FrostGiant/

  4. #4
    Tech Wizard czanier's Avatar
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    Thanks for the input, I guess like the rest of djing it comes down to whatever works for you personally

  5. #5
    Tech Mentor kamjongill's Avatar
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    Yea, me and my buddy both use VCI-400EGE's and we just beat match and go back and forth.
    http://soundcloud.com/kamcoolidge

    VCI-400 EGE - Macbook Pro 13" - Traktor Pro 2 - Lots of Lights

  6. #6
    Tech Guru dope's Avatar
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    The only thing is that if you don't know your buddy's tracks as much as he does, that might cause trouble.
    You're lucky, you're playing on laptops so you can see eachother waveform, so that may be some good help.

    Also, think that DJing is kind of an interpretation of existing tracks, and because you have 2 minds doing the thing, they can conflict
    i.e. one guy would like to cut bass on this track his mate's track to introduce, and the 2nd guy doesn't feel to turn up the bass at the exact same time, result = no kickdrum/bass, absolute mess.

    I've played several mixes with a friend (from 30 mins to 3h straight) on Mixlr, not at a gig.
    We were able to communicate on how we are going to transition, i could ask him to high pass filter, he could ask me to add some midrange freqs etc..
    It depends on the gig but sometimes I doubt you can communicate that easy, because of the noisy environnement.
    A trick that you can use is to route the output of one of the DJs to the other DJ's mixer. It's one-sided, but if necessary, the DJ who has the "main mixer" can have a bit of control over his mate's track (cutting, lowering eq). But note that if DJ A controls the "main mixer", and DJ B cut the bass on his track, DJ won't be able to restore the bass with the mixer, so it's kinda weird but it can work wonders if mastered. Not to mention that DJ A can FX DJ B's buildup that is also FXed, ahaha it can be crazy.

    The only "real" solution I see in that case is to have played with your mate long enough, for months or even years, so that you don't need words to communicate. It takes a long time to achieve, trust me. (OT : I was playing competitive counter strike years ago, and with a teammate, we played almost everynight of the week together for I'd say a year before we get the automatisms, but then it was super effective, knowing by experience and instinct what your mate is going to do in the next seconds)


    PS : another solution i just thought of would be not to mix toghether, but one after the other, on the same setup. A "back to back".
    Last edited by dope; 05-04-2012 at 06:58 AM.

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