I watched 15 minutes of that, then used the video preview bar for the rest of it.egbert101 wrote:So back on topic:
What kills electronic music, is basically time. In fact, time kills everything. However, even when humanity eventually kills itself, at least it will leave the following to the aliens:
God help us.
Here's what I saw:
1) His set was probably pre-planned, as he only a few times put on headphones. However, he still had to cue and play the tracks (and EQ), so at least he was doing something (most festival DJs just mime along, even though they really have nothing to do but hit play).
2) He was playing a mixture of bass music (future bass, trap, dubstep), and it was done in a way that was well mixed (for the genres and sub-genres) and kept the energy up.
3) He stayed at his booth...no crowd surfing or anything like that.
4) He was very engaged with the crowd, and that is something that many festival and/or club DJs aren't
Is it the same as "ye olden days" of DJing? No, but DJing and producing electronic music has always been about pushing technological boundaries, and as long as long as the DJ does their job right, it doesn't matter the format or playstyle, as long as its still DJing and not just being a juke box (and I don't mean like for mobile DJs that do weddings and birthdays, I mean the "just push play and that's it" DJs).
So your post is

