Uncategorized | Scratch Geek https://scratchgeek.com Supporting the turntablism community Sun, 05 Jan 2020 19:37:04 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.5.5 https://i0.wp.com/scratchgeek.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/10/cropped-IMG-6370-1.jpg?fit=32%2C32&ssl=1 Uncategorized | Scratch Geek https://scratchgeek.com 32 32 152438501 Cheapest Way to Start Scratching: Numark PT-01 Scratch and Reloop Spin Portable Turntable Review https://scratchgeek.com/cheapest-way-to-start-scratching/ Sun, 05 Jan 2020 19:02:05 +0000 https://scratchgeek.com/?p=1760 A few years back if people told me they wanted to get into Scratching, I would say that required a MINIMUM investment of $500 to get ONE turntable durable enough to withstand a heavy hand and to get a USED or Low-budget scratch mixer. Today, the burgeoning portable turntable industry has blessed us with some […]

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A few years back if people told me they wanted to get into Scratching, I would say that required a MINIMUM investment of $500 to get ONE turntable durable enough to withstand a heavy hand and to get a USED or Low-budget scratch mixer.

Today, the burgeoning portable turntable industry has blessed us with some products that have eliminated this recommendation from me. If you are looking to solely pick up Scratching (NOT DJing in its entirety), there are now a few very viable options that can get you started immediately and cheaply.

Portable Scratch Turntables

So if you’re new to the DJ scene or haven’t been keeping up with your DJ related content, you might be wondering what is a Portable Scratch Turntable? Until the last several years, DJ’s were relegated to a cord long enough to reach an outlet. Thanks to Vestax, Numark and several resourceful DJ’s; portable turntables meant for sample listening to records were modified into battery-powered scratching devices. These turntables would be modified with a crossfader attached to them (or inside them) and allowed DJ’s to finally express the art of turntablis without the constraint of cords.

Vestax Handytrax
Numark PT-01 (NOT THE PT-01 SCRATCH)

Numark and Reloop have seen the explosion in the amount of DJ’s modifying these portable turntables and decided to hop into the market; creating devices that require minimum-to-zero modification and can be used for scratching right out of the box in the Numark PT-01 Scratch and the Reloop Spin.

If you’re looking to learn to scratch and don’t want to pay that high entry fee that used to plague want-to-be turntablists these portable turntables can be a great entry point at an extremely reasonable price. If you’re already an experienced turntablist, these decks open up the freedom of choice to scratch on the go.

Numark PT-01 Scratch
Reloop Spin

The Best Portable Turntable for Scratching

So the cheapest out of the box is the PT-01 Scratch and this used to be my recommendation. However, after trying the Reloop Spin numerous times, this turntable blows it out the water right out of the box. For disclosure I actually own a PT-01 Scratch with a modified Jesse Dean Crossfader.

Having gotten my hands on both the Numark PT-01 and Reloop Spin, The Reloop Spin aboslutely takes the cake as the best portable turntable available.

The Reloop Spin uses the same tonearm, cartridge and stylus as the PT-01 scratch; which in both cases leaves a lot to desire. But this stock tonearm gets the job done out the box and is pretty skip resistance for how flimsy it looks. With that said, the main advantages the Reloop Spin carries is the platter is significantly more solid and the Reloop Spin allows you to change which side you want the Crossfader on. The Reloop Spin is also the only mass produced portable turntable with Bluetooth streaming technology; this allows you to wirelessy stream instrumentals and beats to scratch over.

Reloop Spin
PT-01 Scratch Stock Toggle Switch

The biggest problem with the PT-01 Scratch versus the Reloop Spin is the Stock Fader. In the case of the PT-01 it is not a crossfader at all, it is actually a switch (like an on and off toggle switch). So in order to get the feeling of scratching on a crossfader you will be required to make a modification upon purchase. The Reloop Spin actually comes with a decent crossfader AND it comes with the option to switch which side you want to place crossfader. This is my other biggest problem with the PT-01 Scratch. Since I scratch with my Dominant Right Hand on the Record, I am forced to scratch at an awkward angle on the PT-01 Scratch where my hand has to hover over the tonearm. This is non-issue for people that scratch with their Left Hand on the record, but I feel it is an important point that I haven’t seen in many reviews.

Best Portable Turntable Choice: Specifications and Prices

The Reloop Spin’s significant durability advantage over the Numark PT-01 makes it the significant better choice for a beginner who will inevitably have a heavier hand than someone with years of scratching experience. My only gripe with the Reloop Spin is though the stock crossfader is definitely useable, it does have a farther cut-in distance (or lag time before the sound can be heard) than I prefer. With that being said, there are already plenty of replacement crossfaders available that eliminate this problem.

The other only gripe is that the Reloop Spin averages in at about $100 more than the Numark PT-01 Scratch, but again the Reloop Spin does NOT require modifications that can become costly.

If you want to read a more comprehensive review of the available Portable Scratching options I recommend checking out this article from djturntablereview.com 

Additional Specs for the Reloop Spin from DJTurntableReview.com:

This turntable can be operated with regular USB PSU (5 V, 2 A), USB power bank or batteries. It can play 4 speeds at 33, 45 and 78 rpm and has a pitch knob for +/- 20%. The Reloop Spin has a good set of headphone output and RCA line outputs as well as a line input. You can also record your cuts directly from the USB output. This comes with a battle scratch record in the box.

The post Cheapest Way to Start Scratching: Numark PT-01 Scratch and Reloop Spin Portable Turntable Review first appeared on Scratch Geek.

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Talkin’ Bout Practice: How to Practice Scratching and Djing plus DJ Career Advice from Experts https://scratchgeek.com/dj-advice/ Sun, 17 Feb 2019 21:38:49 +0000 https://scratchgeek.com/?p=1578 What’s up Scratch Geeks? This article ended up being more insightful than we ever thought. We essentially asked a few questions to some of our favorite djs and turntablists that we often feature on the Scratch Geek instagram page. We had the idea of talking about practice and Djing as a career. Part of the […]

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What’s up Scratch Geeks?

This article ended up being more insightful than we ever thought. We essentially asked a few questions to some of our favorite djs and turntablists that we often feature on the Scratch Geek instagram page. We had the idea of talking about practice and Djing as a career.

Part of the goal was to emphasize good practice versus just practicing for practice sake. It is a common trait for new Dj’s to have a time goal on practice. For example: “I’m going to to practice 1
Hour a day” but this is not a helpful way to think about it.

So we wanted to know in regards to scratching, mixing, beat juggling or any aspect of djing:

  • How do some of the top DJ’s and turntablists practice?
  • How did they practice when they were starting out?
  • We also asked for any specific techniques, tips, tricks, drills in regard to practicing.

The other question we looked to explore was around djing as a career/job. We asked these top DJ’s:

  • How did you get your first dj Gig? When in terms of years did you get your first gig?
  • If different then the questions above, when/how did you get your first real gig (bar/club gig)?
  • When in terms of years after beginning did you enter your first battle?
  • Whether or not you consider yourself a full time dj, without giving too much detail if you do not want any chance you’d want to discuss the financial implications of being a full time dj? Or just djing as a job?

Hope you enjoy their answers!

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DJ Myke aka Micionero (@djmyke_micionero_)– 2 x DMC Italy Team Champion, 2x DMC Italy Champion (Solo), 4x DMC World Finalist, 2nd Place ITF Team Eastern Hemisphere 2003

On Practicing:

“Let’s start from one point, music for me is not a sport. I have always based my “daily practice” on ideas, when I have inspiration for a piece, then the practice starts. I do not like to play for warm-up, music is communication and / or expression. Even when I try the individual techniques I always try to do it on the basis of music, even if it takes more time my intent is to play the technique in order to acquire the mastery of it first. An advice that can help in the techniques is to not focus on a single hand but to try, in everyday things, to use both.”

Djing as a Career:

“I started about 14/15 years with the first school or birthday parties, I always had a great passion for djing. I met the scratch through videotapes after a couple of years I practiced I won some regional competitions, then I landed at DMC Italy and I won it for 4 years, in the same years I also won an ITF championship today IDA, from there they arrived the first requests for live, showcase. I started to make myself known also as a producer urban / hip hop and from there (I have done many live with rapper of the Italian scene) we say that my passion has become a job. First I did everything to maintain and maintain my passion, at the time there were no systems like TRAKTOR or SERATO, so if you wanted to keep up you had to buy the vinyls, and the vinyls cost, the equipment was expensive and was not readily available as today. I totally consider myself a professional DJ because I’ve been living on this for the last 20 years and I’m very proud of it. In my sets of course the scratch, the beatjuggling and any creative form of djing are not only present but are the soul of everything.”

Junk ThirtyThree (@junkthirtythree)– Wild Cuts 2018 World Vice-Champion, Cut2Cut Greece 2018 Champion

Practicing:

“When I was starting out scratching, I was practicing for 5-6 hours a day but it wasn’t a time goal. I was practicing certain techniques in a tempo around 70-75bpm and when I was comfortable with it I was going faster. An advice I give if you want to reach a more advanced level and advanced combos is to master the 2-click flare, its the key to different techniques like the autobahn etc.

Spend time to your record hand, the tars, scribbles and other tricks are useful to develo your style and be unique!

Nowadays I mostly freestyle with the techiniques I know but im trying to add a different flavour to them with variations in the pitch or with some swing. Always got in the back of my head to try out different things!

DJ battles and DJing as a Career:

“I was scratching for around a year when I entered my first battle. I did it mostly for the experience than to place or something

My first gig was a guest in a club where some friends wre playing so they invited me in and it was like 3 years after I started.”

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Follow Her

DJ Javin (@djjavin)- 2018 US Redbull 3style Finalist, 2018 Goldie Awards Finalist, Mixer for KKFR Power 98.3 FM (Phoenix, AZ) and Pitbull’s Globalization (Sirius XM) 

Practice:

”When it comes to practicing, for me personally, I practice to have fun but also learn something new. When I first started I would practice about 3-6 hours a day (with small breaks in between) trying to get the sound I’d like.”

DJ battles and DJing as a Career:

“I work as a full time DJ and I live off of this craft as my main source of income. I DJ different areas (radio, hometown residencies, agencies, traveling gigs, etc) to have a balance and constant source of income. With this “job” it’s always going to be – you get what you give. If you put in the work, you’ll get the rewards of it. There’s also a lot of different factors other than being good at your job which comes with experience and connecting with people. It’s always about learning and growing (for me personally). As i grow, my career grows and my talents/skills grow as well.

At this time and day, anyone can get a DJ gig even just starting out. It’s a great learning experience and depending how you grow and how much you’re invested in DJing will determine your path; whichever paths in DJing you’d like to take. Whether it’s clubs, battles, radio, corporate, mobiles, etc.

I was a bedroom DJ for a year, taking small gigs to learn. Entered my first battle a little after that and received my first radio residency from one of the battles I entered.”

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DJ Koncept (@koncept11.11)- UK DMC Supremacy Champion 2018

Practice:

“I try and practice everyday. How I practice changes on my mood mostly. Some days I’ll just feel like having a freestyle cut. Just going over all the patterns I already know and trying to get them tighter or faster. When I’m learning something new, I tend to just focus on mastering that one scratch. I’ll practice it along with everything else I can do. I find if you try and learn too much at once it makes it a bit too confusing for me. It’s also important to still practice

Other cuts you can do while learning something new so you don’t forget how to do those. I also try and balance beat juggling into my practice. Again I’ll go over patterns I already know and try and come up with new ones. If I’m preparing for a battle my practice is quite different too. I will be experimenting a lot and working on new ideas. When the set is finally made, my practice will be a lot of just drilling the routine or routines over and over. Trying to make them better, adding more details and making it as tight as possible. Tightness is so important to me. I’d rather see something more simple but super tight over someone trying something mad technical but it being sloppy.

I also practice my mixing along with this. Trying out different tunes to mix together, practicing to keep my mixing tight. I find I need to practice mixing very often or I start to get more sloppy.

When I was starting out I was learning new stuff all the time which made it really exciting. I think when I got to a certain level I stopped learning so much. Only over the past 5 years from me moving to a different city I’ve learned a lot more

I think your environment and practicing with different people helps a lot. I went to a dj school with DJ K-SWIZZ (Reigning IDA World Champion and Reigning DMC World Champion) and his dad too which was a great help too. So use any resources like that you can. Practice with people preferably who are better than you and never stop learning. It’s also important to incorporate your own style into new techniques you learn.

DJ Battles and DJ Career:

I got my first gig pretty quickly. Within months of starting to DJ. This was unpaid though! The first I started making money from gigs was when I started running my own events a few years later

Battles are an amazing way to network and boost your skill level. I wouldn’t consider myself as a full time DJ. I once was and it can be fairly up and down with your cash flow. Residencys are best for steady money. Also be careful, when it turns into a job it can sometimes take the fun out of it. I always want to have fun when I DJ, and always play the music I love. That’s why I do this!”

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Scratch Geek Exclusive Mixes https://scratchgeek.com/mixes/ Mon, 04 Feb 2019 16:40:02 +0000 https://scratchgeek.com/?p=1562 What’s up Scratch Geeks? This page is dedicated to hosting some our favorite DJ’s mixes made exclusively for Scratch Geek. We will host a range of mixes from established as well as up and coming dj’s many of whom are making a name for themselves on social media. The only things we asked of these […]

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What’s up Scratch Geeks?

This page is dedicated to hosting some our favorite DJ’s mixes made exclusively for Scratch Geek.

We will host a range of mixes from established as well as up and coming dj’s many of whom are making a name for themselves on social media.

The only things we asked of these DJs is to showcase their style, and make sure their mix is dope and clean. Enjoy!

All the mixes can also be found on: https://www.mixcloud.com/ScratchGeek/

DJ E@ZY

With over a decade of DJing experience, DJ E@ZY out of Connecticut blessed Scratch Geek with a club ready banging mix. DJ E@ZY has a stacked resume including Winning New London’s Whalie Award for Best DJ, and performing for Nike, he is also the resident DJ at Hot Rod’s Cafe in New London, CT and is the official DJ for Epicenter Experience LLC of Boston, MA. He has had the opportunity to perform for a variety of clubs/bars and events in the New England and Tri-State areas. Enjoy this killer mix.

Follow DJ E@ZY:
https://www.facebook.com/therealdjeazy
https://www.instagram.com/djeazy55/
https://twitter.com/djeazy55

DJ Yamez

Beginning his dynamic career in Pittsburgh and bursting onto the New York scene in 2004, DJ Yamez has done it all from working with Trey Songz to Azealia Banks, to guest DJing Sway in the Morning to working extensively with Red Bull Music Academy. Yamez has opened for the likes of Avril Lavigne, Craig David, Nas, Usher, Mr. Cheeks, Ja Rule and Ashanti among others. He’s a DJ’s DJ who’s name garners respect among the tri-state area. This exclusive Scratch Geek mix showcases his eclectic style. Enjoy.

Follow Him:

https://www.instagram.com/djyamez/
https://soundcloud.com/djyamez1

Twitter: @djyamez

DJ Vega

Hailing for Seattle, DJ Vega has established himself as a well rounded DJ from opening for acts such as Dave Chappelle, 2Chainz and J. Cole, serving as the OFFICIAL DJ for Ryan Caraveo and and Gifted Gab, to Djing weddings, radio shows (Kube 93.3FM (Seattle, WA), KISS 106.1FM (Seattle, WA) and competing and Redbull Threestyle Qualifiers. DJ Vega, the captain of the Fantasy League DJ’s, showcases his style and abilities in this dope exclusive mix.

Follow Him:
https://instagram.com/thatdjvega
https://twitter.com/VegaTheVirgo
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCSOpa_AgMLrFONXuNXFv5fw

Website:
https://thatdjvega.com/

JaysonJamesB

Next up we have JaysonJamesB who hit us with the real hip hop in this mix. He’s an up and coming DJ/Turntablist out of Long Island who’s been scratching for only 2 years but is already making a splash. He’s quickly proved worthy to be featured on Scratch Geek. Be on the look out for a few of his expected releases this year.

Follow Him:

https://www.instagram.com/jaysonjamesb/

 

DJ AndOne

Hailing from D.C, DJ AndOne has quickly made a name for himself opening for artists such as Post Malone, Ying Yang Twins, MIMS, Baby Bash, Bowling for Soup and more. He brings a high energy unique style that has been showcased across numerous social media platforms.

Follow Him:
https://www.instagram.com/djandonemusic 
https://soundcloud.com/djandonemusic 
https://www.mixcloud.com/djandonemusic/stream/

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Shane Canfield

Kicking off our mix series we have Shane Canfield who is quickly gaining a name for himself through multiple social media platforms. You may have seen his 1 minute toneplays on instagram, most notably featured on DJcity and of course @ScratchGeek . Shane has been djing for 5 years and hails from a small town in Illinois with hopes to enter Red Bull 3style in the future. This mix shows off his style with quick mixes, and mood shifts and really embodies the goal of this series. 

Follow Him:

https://www.instagram.com/shanedjs/ 
https://soundcloud.com/shanecanfield

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Advanced Scratch Combos: Part 1 https://scratchgeek.com/advanced-scratch-combos-part-1/ Sun, 11 Nov 2018 00:17:41 +0000 https://scratchgeek.com/?p=784 Hey Scratch Geeks, Scratch Combos are what give people their signature style and flow. Stringing along multiple scratches can sometimes be difficult and we as turntablists often get into a rut, doing the same scratch combos over and over which makes our freestyles sound monotonous. It is for this reason we wanted to bring to […]

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Hey Scratch Geeks,

Scratch Combos are what give people their signature style and flow. Stringing along multiple scratches can sometimes be difficult and we as turntablists often get into a rut, doing the same scratch combos over and over which makes our freestyles sound monotonous. It is for this reason we wanted to bring to you guys new combos to think about. Of course many of these combos are not easy and you must be very fluent in the individual scratches before advancing into combos. It is for this reason that we recommend learning all the scratches in our previous tutorials if you’re having trouble with some of these combos.

With that being said I hope some of these inspire you to create your own combos. Happy learning and happy scratching!

Advanced Chirp Flare Combos:

Adding these types of chirp combos into your arsenal gives variation and a clean sound to your flow and they’re pretty easy to transition between once you get them down. This was will your cuts a signature crisp sound when done at higher speeds, double time and triple time. 

Chirp-2 OG Flare Combos

This scratch is fairly easy to grasp when you know the individual scratches well. However, it sounds very complex and crisp in the flow, especially once you can double time and triple time this scratch. Again, remember you can always go back to previous tutorials in the blog if you cannot do a chirp or OG flare.

2-1-2 Combo (Chirps, OG Flares)

In this next video YoshiTTR breakdowns a 2-1-2 combo which uses chirp scratches, OG (original) flares and Reverse OG flares and then breaks it down with using wave tears to accent the scratch. These are the type of advanced scratches we hope can really elevate your scratch game and help to come up with new combos:

Chirp-Crescent Flare Combos

YoshiTTR also breaks down a chirp flare and chirp crescent combo here:

If you want to get really advanced and nerdy with combos. DJ chilean has a take on the last couple tutorials and some theory on stringing combos. Here he breaks down two chirp-OG flares into a Chirp-Crescent Flare combo with standard scratch notation at the bottom of the screen.

Scratch Combos in the Flow

Here Dopez breaks down how to incorporate similarly advanced combos into the flow using chirp flares, chirp tears, different takes on boomerang scratches:

Hand Control Combos (Tears, Whips and Waves)

Many of our favorite turntablists would agree that proper record control is what brings out style and variations into scratch combos. These next combos display this and show how good record control and accentuation using tears can make even the most basic combos sound advanced. 

Montreal based turntablist/producer and current 2018 IDA Canada Scratch Champion Jon Rist provided us with an exclusive combo for our Scratch Geek Youtube Channel and Scratch Geek IGTV as part of our next series. But we can give a sneak preview of this here as it incorporates whip tears. It is a essentially a forward drag and two whip tears backwards. The record hand is doing an og flare motion. It is open on the forward drag and the whips/waves are getting fadered. 

Dopez's Super Secret Scratch Tutorial (Whip Scratch Combos):

We again are featuring Dopez here who shows us how to incorporate Whip tears with clicks over them in his Super Secret Scratch Tutorial. You can find him cutting it up on instagram as well at @dopez1200 and hes given us the cosign to link these awesome tutorials he provides. 

Again here you can see how advanced record control techniques can really transform any combo.

Three Click-Tear Scratch Combo

Here TTM Academy breaks down a 3-click Tear combo; of course this can also be down with a 2 click and tear combo and can be done at different speeds, but the overall principle is great to get down and can translate into many different combos:

Scratch Combos Using Two-Click Motions

As we mentioned in the previous tutorial series once you get the 2-click motion down, you can transition nicely into different combos using that motion. Here are some examples and of that.

Two Click-OG Flare Combo by ScratchRecipe:

Boomerang Tazer Scratch Combo By FedoBeatz:

Intermediate Scratch Combos

If some of these are too advanced Emma Short-E breaks down a few scratch combos for DJcity using more basic scratches. This doesn’t use incredibly advanced techniques but shows you the power of combining scratches. This uses the forward scratch, slices and transforms.

Though they’ve discontinued this series, DJcity used to do a new combo every month for two years and those can be seen here in this playlist here and use more beginner to intermediate scratches: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=w7cjJlvob3M&index=25&list=PL_Xo_P4FL2K40qSGPMfpB9_6VjpvO2AxT&t=0s 

 

Future Scratch Combo Posts:

As we continue with this series we will dive into the favorite combos of our favorite turntablists and also provide exclusive tutorials explaining these combos.

We will also continue to link more Advanced Scratch Combos as we find ones that are challenging and inspiring.

Hope you guys enjoyed the combos above, and good luck learning them!

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A Brief History of Turntablism https://scratchgeek.com/turntablism-for-beginners-and-the-history-of-turntablism/ Thu, 20 Sep 2018 19:56:52 +0000 http://scratchgeek.com/?p=184 Turntablism: Is the Turntable a musical instrument? I feel like this is a topic that becomes more an more relevant as the years go by and DJ culture becomes more mainstream. This discussion is meant be informative on the Art of DJing and how it evolved. I highly encourage any aspiring bedroom djs, club djs, […]

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Turntablism: Is the Turntable a musical instrument?

I feel like this is a topic that becomes more an more relevant as the years go by and DJ culture becomes more mainstream. This discussion is meant be informative on the Art of DJing and how it evolved. I highly encourage any aspiring bedroom djs, club djs, turntablists etc. to truly learn their craft and continue to promote this beautiful culture.

Turntablists vs DJs

Often there is a negative connotation with one calling themselves a D.J. Many people think that Disk Jockeys simply play back music (and many do), but are either ignorant to or dismiss the fact that there are a subculture of DJs who use the turntable to manipulate and create new sounds and music. These DJs are given the title “turntablist”. They learn and master  techniques to manipulate the records, using the turntable as an instrument.

Should Turntablists be considered musicians?

Because  turntablists have the ability to create a work that is entirely new and unique, they should be considered musicians and the turntable should be considered an instrument.

Turntablism History and the evolution of turntablism

DJs pre-scratching

The DJs main goal was to have people dancing. The most advanced techniques involved beatmatching, mixing and looping. Beatmatching is when a DJ will match the tempo of two songs and seamlessly mix them. Looping is self-explanatory. Before scratching there was limited creativity and the DJ would simply play other people’s music. The DJ was never featured, he would either back up an mc or play others music. After the invention of scratching the DJ became a musician.

The Invention of Scratching

Grand Wizzard Theodore is widely credited as the inventor of scratching. It is claimed that his mother was yelling at him to turn off his music and he stopped the record with his hand to create the first scratching sound. It is here that he experimented and perfected the first baby scratch. Scratching is a DJ or turntablist technique used to produce distinctive sounds by moving a vinyl record back and forth on a turntable while optionally manipulating the crossfader on a DJ mixer. While scratching is most commonly associated with hip hop music, since the 1990s, it has been used in some styles of pop and nu metal.

Evolution Of Scratching (New Techniques)

New techniques are constantly evolving in the turntablist community which allows different sounds and patterns to be created. This allows for an ever evolving culture.

Scratch Drumming

Is exactly what it sounds like. The turntablist makes a new beat entirely out of scratching. This is usually done with a kick, snare and hi hat. This, of course, enables the turntablist to essence “drum” any pattern they would like. This would make them a musician as they can create a new beat instantly and can create complex patterns similar and sometimes more advanced than regular drumming. This technique enables turntablist to form bands, or perform with other turntablists at the same time.

Beat Juggling

Beat juggling is the act of manipulating two or more samples in order to create a unique composition, using multiple turntables and one or more mixers. This can involve pauses, scratching, backspins and delays. Beat Juggling has its roots in cutting, in which a small section of a beat is looped using two copies of the same record. This was first done by Kool DJ Herc, and later refined by DJs such as Grandmaster Flash in the early 80s. Two other fundamentals of modern beat juggling technique include “tapping” or “walking,” where the DJ taps the record in between percussion sounds, stopping it momentarily to slow down the beat, or pushing it faster to speed it up, and “shuffling” or “strobing,” where the DJ loops the two records at different points in the beat, literally remixing the record live by playing new combinations of the sounds on the records.

Competitions

The DMC World DJ Championships is an annual DJ competition hosted by Disco Mix Club (DMC) which began in 1986. It helped push the boundaries of Djing and turntablism. The battle places turntablists against one another in an effort to create the most creative and clean routine. This competition has helped to bring forth new techniques, new fans, new artists, new technologies. in 1986 DJ Cheese brought the best out of the turntables by scratching his way to DMC’s first ever World Title. By the following year, turntable tricks started to establish themselves with the emergence of props, body tricks and a variety of scratching techniques, DJs scratched with bicycles and even kitchen sinks, Chad Jackson used a billiard cue and an American football to help him become the 1987 Champion at a venue that had never before featured a DJ let alone heard hip-hop riffs.

New Technology

Vinyl emulation software allows the user to physically manipulate the playback of digital audio files on a computer using the turntables as an interface, thus preserving the hands-on ‘feel’ of djing with vinyl while allowing playback of audio recordings not available in phonograph This allows DJs to scratch, beatmatch, and perform other turntablism that would be impossible with a conventional keyboard-and-mouse computer interface. DJs can essentially have any song they wish now and have easier access to sound effects, and new types of sound manipulation.

DJ Schools

DJ Academy :The ”Turntable Technique: The Art of the D.J.,” by Stephen Webber is the first musical method book for aspiring hip-hop D.J.’s. For his book Mr. Webber used interviews, photographs and traditional music notation to translate the turntablists’ approach into a series of lessons and exercises that an aspiring D.J. could practice. These include basic back-spinning and beat-matching and more advanced techniques like the four-finger crab scratch. Webber is a professor at The Berklee College of Music and wants to introduce a class in Turntablism. There are already outside organizations such as the DJ Scratch Academy that teach students the art of djing and turntablism. In 2002, Rob Principe and the late Jam Master Jay founded Scratch DJ Academy with the goal of lowering the barrier of entry to the art form of the DJ.

Whether you’re an aspiring turntablist or club DJ we encourage all djs to learn the art of djing to the best of their abilities

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The post A Brief History of Turntablism first appeared on Scratch Geek.

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