How should i select tunes for a targeted mixtape?
How should i select tunes for a targeted mixtape? Posted on: 12.12.2013 by Elease Bremerman Hey everyone, i'm trying to send a mixtape in the direction of a couple of promotors to try and pick up some gigs. When selecting tracks should i include a wide arrange of styles (eg. tech, deep and bass/jackin') or specifically select a particular area to hone a sound in on. Which would make me seem a stronger artist?Cheers for the help | |
Nereida Jasnoch 13.12.2013 |
Originally Posted by Dj Noriddim
But that's just my opinion. |
Dominque Strosser 12.12.2013 |
Originally Posted by MyUsername
I have found this formula works well in a ten minute mix Start off with seamless easy transitions that raise the engery steadily for 3 minutes, next display your technical skill and mixing speed for 4 minutes take the engery of the mix to a peak finally for the last 3 minutes bring the engery down with more seamless transitions. This will show the promoter three very important facts that go into choosing Dj. It will display that you have the ability to open, headline or close, understand how to control the engery of your sets effectively creating atmosphere and that you know how to structure your sets. Hope this helps |
Elease Bremerman 12.12.2013 | Hey everyone, i'm trying to send a mixtape in the direction of a couple of promotors to try and pick up some gigs. When selecting tracks should i include a wide arrange of styles (eg. tech, deep and bass/jackin') or specifically select a particular area to hone a sound in on. Which would make me seem a stronger artist? Cheers for the help |
Augustine Mitzen 13.12.2013 | target them |
Lawana Mileto 14.12.2013 | Focus on the music your most passionate about and know the best it will show in the mix. But then again who really gets booked off the back of a mix? I wouldn't bother doing one, instead Go to the events start chatting to people involved, be seen there showing your support, eventually just blag yourself a set. And to the 10 minute mix thing, avoid, what a load of sh*t. Did you read what genres the OP played, 7 deep/tech house tracks in ten minutes?? |
Dominque Strosser 14.12.2013 | Ten minutes is what most promoters will listen to these days well at least where I'm from hell they usually don't listen to the mix but that's another subject. Ten minutes or even fifteen minutes is good enough. You can fit 7-10 songs in that time which is more than adequate to leave an impression on some one. Think of it as a mashup. |
Hellen Mindrup 13.12.2013 | Damn what promoters hire you based on a mix, send em my way lol |
Hank Guidas 13.12.2013 | I agree with others about track selection. But, ten minute mix tapes are shit. They are too rushed. Show them that you can build a set |
Nereida Jasnoch 13.12.2013 |
Originally Posted by Dj Noriddim
But that's just my opinion. |
Brunilda Kora 12.12.2013 | Put the names of tracks on little pieces of paper and pull 'em out of a hat. |
Dominque Strosser 12.12.2013 |
Originally Posted by MyUsername
I have found this formula works well in a ten minute mix Start off with seamless easy transitions that raise the engery steadily for 3 minutes, next display your technical skill and mixing speed for 4 minutes take the engery of the mix to a peak finally for the last 3 minutes bring the engery down with more seamless transitions. This will show the promoter three very important facts that go into choosing Dj. It will display that you have the ability to open, headline or close, understand how to control the engery of your sets effectively creating atmosphere and that you know how to structure your sets. Hope this helps |
Nereida Jasnoch 12.12.2013 | Cater your mixtape to the party/concept you want to get booked by. Stop by when they have a evening
if you haven't already and get a sense for the vibe/atmosphere and what tunes get played. And voila now you know what tunes are appropriate. Bonus pro tip: include enough unique tracks that stand out and stay away from generic ones. Source: having gone through dozens of mixtapes deciding which DJs we should book |
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