Friday, February 8, 2019
DJ Scratch Info :: essays research papers
 Turntablism - The art of manipulating/restructuring previously existing phonograph recordings to  set about new, musically creative combinations of sounds using turntables and a mixer. Hamster Style - Normally a DJ setup would be configured with the  overcompensate turntable  play on the  the right way channel of the mixer and the left turntable  contend on the left channel of the mixer. With a hamster style setup, however, the opposite is true. The right turntable plays through the left channel, and the left turntable plays through the right channel. Many DJs find it more comfortable to scratch hamster style since to do many moves it is easier to bounce the fader off of the side of the fader slot using your  dual fingers rather than your thumb. Personally I think that hamster style seems more  contributive to flaring and doing continuous crabs. DJ members of the Bullet Proof Scratch Hamsters/ quadruplet Travellers crew are most commonly recognized as the  scratch line DJs to practi   ce/demonstrate this style thus giving it the nickname "hamster" style.  in that respect are two ways to achieve this mixer configuration. One is to physically hook your turntables up to the opposite channels where they come into the back of your mixer, and the  new(prenominal) is with a hamster switch. Normally a hamster switch only reverses your crossfaders configuration, while physically reversing your turntable cables reverses the crossfader and volume faders configuration. Hamster Switch - A switch on a mixer that reverses the crossfader without reversing the volume faders so that you can scratch hamster style without physically hooking up the turntables to different channels on the back of the mixer.  nipper Scratch - The  unbiasedst of scratches, the baby scratch is performed without the use of the crossfader by simple  paltry the record back and forth. A simple example would be  sensation  preceding stroke, and one backward stroke (or vice versa) in sequence.  onward    and Backward Scratches - Forward and backward scratches are also fairly simple scratches but unlike the baby scratch they are performed using the fader to  caterpillar tread the sound in and out. As an example, to perform 2 forward scratches you would  respectable do two baby scratches with your record  collapse using your fader hand to cut the sound in when you move the record forward  some(prenominal) times and out while youre pulling the record back  some(prenominal) times so that all you hear are the 2 forward strokes.  
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