DJ Carlo

Choose one

1 week ago | [YT] | 118



@walidism

Gimme Ean Golden's controllerism on his arcade button modified vestax vci-100

1 week ago | 3  

@pastelle_music

Neither. Track selection, vibe prioritized

1 week ago | 46  

@djcarlo 

this result makes me sad. I guess turntablism is really dying.

1 week ago | 18

@jazzyjase123

I like a mixture of both

1 week ago | 21  

@Jaymo00

Old school scratching is a rare breed of DJ you dont find every day. Always fun to listen to them at work. Respect!

1 week ago | 5  

@JackZ72

Oh boy how do I James Hype my way out of this question 😂

1 week ago | 5  

@CypiXmusic

I didnt not expect more people to go for the former

1 week ago | 6  

@kingsfan2099

Tbh, both are awe-inspiring.

6 days ago | 1  

@SaintMichaelOfficial

Sync button master race 🔁🔀

11 hours ago (edited) | 2  

@tajpanganiban_dj

Turntablism is harder and more of a rarity

6 days ago | 2  

@JayDeeMarvelMusic

c. Original mashups, mic work & crowd control, creative transitions and word play

6 days ago | 1  

@oregonfreddy

One is the dream and the other is how I do stuff. Turntablism is so cool, some day I’ll get there.

1 week ago | 1  

@Madash1

Dj Carlo type of mixing. He can do both 🔥

6 days ago | 1  

@cristina_garcia

I love both. I don't have turntables or neither I'll buy ones due to the difficulty to find vynils of many singles. That said, I love the long blends with EQing for trance sets where transitions flow without cuts. On the other hand, I really love what James Hype does and I'm learning from one of his courses, but I'd keep these techniques for tech house, EDM or DnB. I want to do both styles 😊

2 days ago | 1  

@kennethmalafy8012

I like blends with eq work. All of that other stuff interrupts the flow of the music and actually makes it harder to dance (those are more photo op moments). Imagine dancing with someone, feeling the vibe- then the flow is interrupted by scratching or a trick...... You both stop dancing and turn and look at the DJ.... kinda killed the vibe- didn't it? Quality eq work and seamless blends- where you don't know where one song ends and the next begins.... I also like to hear new music and a lot of DJs that rely on that stuff tend to use the same songs everyone has heard 10000x

1 week ago (edited) | 16  

@OneOkami

Why u gotta make me choose :P. I really think both have their place I try to incorporate both in my mixing.

1 week ago | 3  

@presone2077

Ol skool is dying breed

1 week ago | 1  

@JusDntAsk

80s 90s DJs were held at a very high standard Im not mad at where it's gone ,cuz fr DJing isn't the same.It took me a very long time to consider myself a casual DJ in the 90s.Like now ppl who are drawing these massive crowds don't realize how good they have it.I really lost interest in it now cuz controllers ,waveforms, there's no like idk feeling for me personally when you blend or think up a remix and it works there was always this special feeling.Now it's jus whatever hit sync and for the most part that's it.Idk I still geek out on my portable scratch decks the whole playing for a crowd type stuff isn't the same.I know I sound like old boomer? Is tht what call us ?😂DJs nowadays are common best way I can put i

4 days ago | 1  

@PlutoTradeSMC

I like a little bit of scratching but it’s mainly used for freestylers these days. I don’t wanna be at a party and the Dj constantly scratching but I still appreciate a bit of scratch specially when it’s used to transition to a new song. most Dj I’ve seen at the club barely scratch

5 days ago | 1  

@mugen050

i like Carl Cox Richie Hawtin style of mixing

1 week ago | 1