Description
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- Introduction
- About This Book
- Foolish Assumptions
- Icons Used in This Book
- Beyond this Book
- Where to Go from Here
- Part I: Getting Started with DJing
- Chapter 1: Catching DJ Fever
- Discovering DJing Foundations
- Equipping yourself
- Making friends with your wallet
- Knowing your music
- Researching and discovering
- Connecting your equipment
- DJing Takes Patience and Practice
- Working as a DJ
- Chapter 2: Starting Up with the Bare Bones
- Making a List, Checking It Twice
- Considering Input Devices
- Thinking about turntables
- Deciding on CD decks
- Musing on MP3s and PCs
- One Box to control it all
- Monitoring Your Music with Headphones
- Powering Things Up with Amplifiers
- Figuring Out the Furniture
- Considering ergonomics and stability
- Selecting store-bought stands
- Killing vibration with bricks and air
- Locating Your DJ Setup
- Chapter 3: Shopping for Equipment
- Taking Stock Before You Shop
- Trying before you buy
- Budgeting your money
- Crossing over with digital DJing
- Buying Brand New
- Cruising the high street
- Opting for online shopping
- Buying Second Hand
- Bidding on auction websites
- Scanning newspapers
- Dipping into second-hand and pawn shops
- Making Sure That Your Kit Works
- Checking cables
- Testing turntables
- Vetting CD decks
- Monitoring mixers
- Assessing headphones
- Sounding out amplifiers and speakers
- Chapter 4: Retro Chic or PC Geek? Buying Records, CDs and Digital Music Files
- Researching and Buying Your Tunes
- Buying digital music files
- Purchasing CDs and records
- Choosing what to buy
- News and reviews
- A tangled web
- Weighing up Classic and Current
- Protecting Your Records and CDs
- Storing records
- Cleaning CDs, records and needles
- Repairing vinyl
- Fixing warped records and CDs
- Repairing scratched/cracked CDs
- Backing up digital libraries
- Part II: Stocking Up Your DJ Toolbox
- Chapter 5: The Tech Revolution: Format Choices
- The Contestants
- Finding Your Music
- Circling around turntables
- Polishing up on CD options
- Digital – all music, all night
- Choosing Analogue or Digital Sound
- Mechanics: My Way Is Best!
- Vinyl is more aesthetically pleasing
- Turning the tables on controllers
- Turntables and records are heavy and cumbersome
- Turntables don’t have built-in effects
- You can’t see the music on CD
- Bars don’t have turntables any more
- Turntables are more expensive than CD decks
- Chapter 6: Getting Decked Out with Turntables
- Avoiding Cheap Turntables
- Motoring in the right direction
- Watching out for pitch control design
- Identifying Key Turntable Features
- Start/stop
- On/off
- Strobe light
- Platters
- 33/45/78 rpm
- Target light
- Pitch control
- Counterweight/height adjust
- Anti-skate
- Removable headshell/cartridge
- 45 rpm adaptor
- Customising Your Sound with Advanced Turntable Features
- Pitch range options
- Pitch bend and joystick control
- Tempo reset/quartz lock
- Master tempo/key lock
- Digital display of pitch
- Adjustable brake for start/stop
- Reverse play
- Different shaped tonearms
- Removable cabling
- Digital outputs
- Battle or club design
- MIDI controls
- Setting Up Turntables
- Platter
- Tonearm
- Peripherals
- Servicing Your Turntables
- Chapter 7: Perfecting Your Decks: Slipmats and Needles
- Sliding with Slipmats
- Choosing an appropriate slipmat
- Winning the friction war
- Getting Groovy with Needles and Cartridges
- Feeling the Force with Counterweight Settings
- Nurturing Your Needles
- Chapter 8: Spinning with CDs
- Getting to know the DJ CD Deck
- Laying out the design
- Navigating the CD
- Adjusting the Pitch
- Smoothing Out Vibrations
- Working with the Cue
- Locating the cue
- Storing the cue
- Checking the cue
- Starting the tune
- Taking Advantage of Special Features
- Digital music file playback
- Master tempo
- Hot cues
- Loop
- Sample banks
- Reverse play
- Beats-per-minute counters
- Digital DJ software control
- Having Fun Experimenting
- Chapter 9: Bits and PCs: Digital DJing
- Designing Your Digital DJ Setup
- Processing computer hardware
- Memory and processor considerations
- Stability
- Controlling the Digits
- Laptop/computer only
- Enhancing the basics by adding hardware
- DVS using records and CDs
- Connections and requirements
- Adding Hardware Controllers
- All-in-one hardware controllers
- Putting CD decks and mixers in control
- Your way is the best way . . . for you
- Picking Out the Software
- Software designed for DJs
- Controlling Decisions
- Livening up software choice
- Exploring Alternatives
- DJing with iPods, iPads and USB drives
- Mixing on the move
- Chapter 10: Stirring It Up with Mixers
- Getting Familiar with Mixer Controls
- Inputs
- Outputs
- Input VU monitoring
- Cross-faders
- Channel faders
- EQs and kills
- Gain controls
- Headphone monitoring
- Balance and pan controls
- Hamster switch
- Punch and transform controls
- Built-in effects
- Effects send and return
- Built-in samplers
- Built-in beat counters
- Beat light indicators
- MIDI and USB controls
- Choosing the Right Mixer
- The seamless mix DJ
- The scratch DJ
- The effects DJ
- The rock/party/wedding DJ
- Servicing Your Mixer
- Chapter 11: Ear-splitting Advice about Not Splitting Your Ears: Headphones
- Choosing a Good Set of Headphones
- Single-sided coiled cords
- Swivelling earpieces
- User-replaceable parts
- Cutting the cord
- Sticking it to your ears
- Remembering that the Volume Doesn’t Have to Go Up to 11
- Using Earplugs
- Chapter 12: Letting Your Neighbours Know That You’re a DJ: Amplifiers
- Choosing Suitable Amplification
- Settling on your home stereo
- Purchasing powered speakers
- Opting for separates
- Allowing a power margin for error
- Working with Monitors
- Working with the speed of sound
- Positioning your monitor
- Noise Pollution: Keeping an Ear on Volume Levels
- Protecting your ears
- Neighbourhood watch
- Realising that you only need one speaker
- Chapter 13: Plugging In, Turning On: Setup and Connections
- Getting Familiar with Connectors
- RCA/phono connections
- XLRs
- Quarter-inch jack
- Plugging Into the Mixer
- Connecting turntables to a mixer
- Connecting CD decks to a mixer
- Connecting iPods and personal MP3 players to a mixer
- Choosing your mixer inputs
- Plugging in your headphones
- Connecting effects units to a mixer
- Connecting mixer outputs
- Connecting a mixer to your home hi-fi
- Connecting a mixer to powered speakers
- Connecting a mixer to your PC/Mac
- Troubleshooting Setup and Connections
- Everything’s connected and switched on, a record (or CD) is playing, but I can’t hear anything from the speakers
- I can hear the music from the amp now, but I can’t hear anything through the headphones
- One of the turntables is distorting and the high frequencies sound fuzzy
- Why do my needles keep jumping when cueing?
- I hear a really strange humming noise coming from my turntables
- Why is everything distorting badly when I play a CD?
- Why is everything really quiet when using my turntables, even when everything is turned up to maximum?
- Everything sounds nice through the mixer but distorts through the amp
- Music is playing through the mixer, but I can’t get any music into the PC
- I’m able to record what’s going in, but nothing is coming back out of the PC
- Why doesn’t my recording device seem to record anything when connected directly to the mixer?
- Part III: The Mix
- Chapter 14: Grasping the Basics of Mixing
- Knowing What Beatmatching’s All About
- Discovering How to Beatmatch
- Choosing skills over thrills
- Setting up your equipment
- Locating the first bass beat
- Starting your tunes in time
- Adjusting for errors
- Knowing which record to adjust
- Using the Pitch Control
- Understanding bpm
- Calculating bpm
- Matching the pitch setting
- All hands (back) on decks
- Playing too slowly or too fast
- Taking your eyes off the pitch control
- Introducing Your Headphones
- Switching over to headphone control
- Cueing in your headphones
- Centring your head with a stereo image
- Practising with your headphones
- Using new tunes
- Quick Beatmatching
- Chapter 15: Picking Up on the Beat: Song Structure
- Why DJs Need Structure
- Multiplying beats, bars and phrases
- The sheep can dance
- Counting on where you are
- Hearing the cymbal as a symbol
- Everything changes
- Actively listening to your tunes
- Studying Song Structure
- Repeating the formula
- Accepting that every tune’s different
- Developing your basic instincts
- Listening to a Sample Structure
- Chapter 16: Mixing Like the Pros
- Perfecting Placement
- Intros over outros
- Melodic outro
- Melodic intro
- Mixing with Breakdowns
- Controlling the Sound of the Mix
- Sliding the cross-fader into play
- Unleashing channel faders
- Letting you in on a big, curvy secret
- Balancing it out with EQs
- Using Mixing Tricks and Gimmicks
- Spinbacks and dead stops
- Power off
- A cappella
- Cutting in
- Remixing with multiple decks
- Effecting the transition
- Mixing Different Styles of Music
- The wedding/party/rock/pop mix
- The R&B mix
- Drum and bass, and breakbeat
- Beatmatching tunes with vastly different tempos
- Chapter 17: Scratching Lyrical
- Setting Up Equipment the Right Way
- Weighing up needles
- Fixing the hole in the middle
- Wearing out your records
- Giving slipmats the slip
- Touching up mixers
- Making the mixer a hamster
- Preparing for the Big Push
- Marking samples
- Scratching on CD, MP3 and Computer
- Marking bits and bytes
- Mastering the Technique
- Getting hands-on with vinyl
- Changing sample sounds
- Starting from Scratch and Back Again
- Scratching without the cross-fader
- Introducing cross-fader fever
- Combining scratches
- Juggling the Beats
- Offsetting
- Practice, dedication and patience
- Part IV: Getting Noticed and Playing Live
- Chapter 18: Building a Foolproof Set
- Choosing Tunes to Mix Together
- Beatmatching – the next generation
- Mixing with care
- Changing gear
- Getting in tune with harmonic mixing
- Keying tunes
- Knowing how much to pitch
- Developing a Style
- Easing up on the energy
- Changing the key
- Increasing the tempo
- Avoiding stagnation
- Respecting the crowd
- Demonstrating your style
- Chapter 19: Creating a Great Demo
- Preparing to Record the Demo
- Programming your set
- Picking and arranging the tunes
- Bridging the gaps
- Practising your set
- Practice makes more than perfect
- Setting up to record
- Correcting recording levels
- Looking After Sound Processing
- Keeping an even volume
- Setting your EQs
- Testing, testing
- Adjusting the amplifier
- Performing the Demo
- Staying focused
- Becoming a perfectionist
- Listening with an open mind
- Making a Demo CD on Computer
- Editing your mix
- Burning a CD
- Creating a track-split CD
- Sending Off the Mix
- Chapter 20: Getting Busy With It: Working as a DJ
- Marketing Yourself
- Flooding the world with your demo
- Playing for free
- Internet broadcasting
- Joining an Agency
- Researching an agency
- Meeting the criteria to join
- Keeping agencies in your musical loop
- Cutting your losses
- Networking Your Way to Success
- Selling yourself
- Making friends
- Going undercover
- Marketing Yourself on the Internet
- Chapter 21: Facing the Music: Playing Live
- Investigating the Venue
- Scoping out a club
- Gearing up to party
- Preparing to Perform
- Selecting the set
- Organising your box
- Knowing What to Expect at the Club
- Dealing with nerves
- Getting used to your tools
- Working in a loud environment
- Playing Your Music
- Reading a crowd
- Handling requests
- Taking over from someone else
- Finishing the night
- Part V: The Part of Tens
- Chapter 22: Ten Resources for Expanding Your Skills and Fan Base
- Staying Current with Media
- Music
- The scene
- Your skills
- Visiting DJ Advice Websites
- Getting Answers through DJ Forums
- Reading Other Books
- Getting Hands-on Advice
- Uploading Podcasts or Hosted Mixes
- Listening to Other People’s Mixes
- Participating in Competitions
- Hosting Your Own Night
- Immerse Yourself in What You Love
- Chapter 23: Ten Answers to DJ Questions You’re Too Afraid to Ask
- Do I Need to Talk?
- What Should I Wear?
- How Do I Go to the Toilet?
- Can I Invite My Friends into the DJ Booth?
- How Do I Remove the Beat or Vocals?
- How Do I Choose My DJ Name?
- Do I Get Free Drinks? (And How Do I Get Drinks from the Bar?)
- Who Does the Lighting for the Night?
- Should I Reset the Pitch to Zero After Beatmatching?
- What Do I Do if the Record or CD Skips or the Software Crashes?
- Chapter 24: Ten Great Influences on Me
- Renaissance: Disc 1
- Tonsillitis
- La Luna: ‘To the Beat of the Drum’
- Ibiza 1996, Radio 1 Weekend
- The Tunnel Club, Glasgow
- Jamiroquai: ‘Space Cowboy’
- Digital DJing
- Alice DeeJay: ‘Better Off Alone’
- Delerium: ‘Silence’
- Sasha and Digweed, Miami 2002
- Chapter 25: Ten DJing Mistakes to Avoid
- Forgetting Slipmats/Headphones/Laptop
- Taking the Needle off the Wrong Record
- Banishing Mixer Setting Problems
- Getting Drunk while Playing
- Surfing while Mixing
- Leaning Over the Decks
- Avoiding Wardrobe Malfunctions
- Spending Too Long Talking to Someone
- Leaving Your Last Tune Behind
- Getting Paid Before You Leave
- Chapter 26: Ten Items to Take with You When DJing
- All the Right Records or Bits
- Making It Personal with Headphones and Slipmats
- You’re a Star! Taking a Digital Recorder/Blank CD
- Spreading the Music with Demos
- Always Being Prepared: Pen and Paper
- Packing Your Tools and Saving the Day
- Keeping Fuelled with Food and Drink
- Keeping Moving with Car Keys
- Have Wallet, Will Travel
- Just Chilling: Chill Mix for the Ride Home
- About the Author
- Cheat Sheet
- More Dummies Products
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