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miniKAT wrote:
Cool. Cheers for this. This is the sort of info I'm after.JonasEdenbrandt wrote:Derrick May and Jeff Mills have both been very influetial on the whole american thing with fast mixing and hard pue techno trax. Try googling for the wizard (jeff mills) sets. I found a page with some of these. It's very early radio mixes from him but they give you a good feeling of were techno is comming from. Also i would give Richie Hawtins "decks efx and 909" mix to see were the fast kind of mixing went later on.
I'm not sure really who best defines the slower and more "let the track talk for itself" berlin style but i guess alot of Ostgut Ton DJs do this so check out any of the Berghain mixes.
Also have a listen to any Larry Levan or Walter Gibbons mix you can find these disco mixes have influenced everybody that ever wanted to DJ and also alot of modern housier disco DJs sound a bit like these guys.
Then maybe the question is "who's the most influential producer"future_jack wrote:Cool. Cheers for this. This is the sort of info I'm after.JonasEdenbrandt wrote:Derrick May and Jeff Mills have both been very influetial on the whole american thing with fast mixing and hard pue techno trax. Try googling for the wizard (jeff mills) sets. I found a page with some of these. It's very early radio mixes from him but they give you a good feeling of were techno is comming from. Also i would give Richie Hawtins "decks efx and 909" mix to see were the fast kind of mixing went later on.
I'm not sure really who best defines the slower and more "let the track talk for itself" berlin style but i guess alot of Ostgut Ton DJs do this so check out any of the Berghain mixes.
Also have a listen to any Larry Levan or Walter Gibbons mix you can find these disco mixes have influenced everybody that ever wanted to DJ and also alot of modern housier disco DJs sound a bit like these guys.
I'm a little reluctant about the Mills stuff now as I think my preference is more the "Let the track talk for itself". Still I'll give it a go.
Well I'm actually interested in both questions and diverged there without realizing. I'll keep this to dj'ing.miniKAT wrote:Then maybe the question is "who's the most influential producer"future_jack wrote:Cool. Cheers for this. This is the sort of info I'm after.JonasEdenbrandt wrote:Derrick May and Jeff Mills have both been very influetial on the whole american thing with fast mixing and hard pue techno trax. Try googling for the wizard (jeff mills) sets. I found a page with some of these. It's very early radio mixes from him but they give you a good feeling of were techno is comming from. Also i would give Richie Hawtins "decks efx and 909" mix to see were the fast kind of mixing went later on.
I'm not sure really who best defines the slower and more "let the track talk for itself" berlin style but i guess alot of Ostgut Ton DJs do this so check out any of the Berghain mixes.
Also have a listen to any Larry Levan or Walter Gibbons mix you can find these disco mixes have influenced everybody that ever wanted to DJ and also alot of modern housier disco DJs sound a bit like these guys.
I'm a little reluctant about the Mills stuff now as I think my preference is more the "Let the track talk for itself". Still I'll give it a go.
The answer prob. still being mills, but hey evrybody has their own views so u know...
I'm not sure if this is true you know - that being that everybody can have their own opinion about this.miniKAT wrote:Then maybe the question is "who's the most influential producer"future_jack wrote:Cool. Cheers for this. This is the sort of info I'm after.JonasEdenbrandt wrote:Derrick May and Jeff Mills have both been very influetial on the whole american thing with fast mixing and hard pue techno trax. Try googling for the wizard (jeff mills) sets. I found a page with some of these. It's very early radio mixes from him but they give you a good feeling of were techno is comming from. Also i would give Richie Hawtins "decks efx and 909" mix to see were the fast kind of mixing went later on.
I'm not sure really who best defines the slower and more "let the track talk for itself" berlin style but i guess alot of Ostgut Ton DJs do this so check out any of the Berghain mixes.
Also have a listen to any Larry Levan or Walter Gibbons mix you can find these disco mixes have influenced everybody that ever wanted to DJ and also alot of modern housier disco DJs sound a bit like these guys.
I'm a little reluctant about the Mills stuff now as I think my preference is more the "Let the track talk for itself". Still I'll give it a go.
The answer prob. still being mills, but hey evrybody has their own views so u know...