Hey just wanted to say Thank You for the video. I learned how to scratch the one click flare from watching it over a year ago even though I dont know french! It just goes to show the how universal and powerful music is.
It is nice to see urban American style all over the planet now. 30 years ago, you could not get a mixer that held up to the rigors of scratching. We knew that shit would break if handled too harshly especially crossfaders. GLI would hold up, but they were 19inch rack mount mixers! The young guys come on and beat on theOld School guys. I know what it was like. It was costly. I was no tech until the military in 1988. I learned to open up shit and solder and all the stuff I paid techs to do.
@NebKheru7 ppl who start scratching need to know the basics, you'll not start scratching with a 3click cresent flare / clover tears. check my last vid call 3click with double baby if you want a advanced scratch technic
@supaphonik The language you use is interesting. In the 80s we just messed around and whatever sounded slick or unique, we used them on our sets and during cassette tape recordings. I see there is a language in this arena now. This digital age is really nice and we are at no limit of what we can produce.Software, timecodes, Laptops. I like it. In the market for a hot PC or will more than likely buy a Macbook Pro.
@supaphonik This is nothing new! Just like people thought Jazzy Jeff was the 1st with the transformer scratch. Back in the 80s when I had Radio Shack mixers, I used the line switches when the crossfader wore out. There was no user replace cross faders then. If I moved the switch slightly faster than the record, I created the same effect you see here. Same sound. A lot of these moves that are deemed "tricks" today were actually mistakes on the DJ's part. People come along and put names on it.
@NebKheru7 just a reminder : dj flare invented the flare technic witch consist to start with the cross fader OPEN , then d-style came with the one click flare !
@supaphonik Wrong on your part. North Carolina's DJ Kaos was doing this shit on 88.1 FM, NCSU's mix shows in 1987. This shit aiint new. Yeah Big name DJs will certainly get the credit, because they get the exposure. I got the recordings. back then there were no user replaceable crossfaders. We used the line switches until we either replaced the mixer or solder in another one, which took some time and ingenuity.
People! Don't you all realize that english isn't the only language in the world? To be honest I don't understand him too because I can't speak french, but I do understand what he's doing cause I can watch his hands and that's the only thing you should pay attention to
search for scratch ahhhh or something, it's called the ahh sample, basically. usually it's on each side of every scratch record, multiple times. there are many different pitches/eq versions of it tho, sometimes it is hard to find one that sounds right to you (ie, enough mid range or no clip on either end)
Hey just wanted to say Thank You for the video. I learned how to scratch the one click flare from watching it over a year ago even though I dont know french! It just goes to show the how universal and powerful music is.
djfaze1200 2 months ago
je habite a pomplemuse
mandaltby 10 months ago
what the beat used in this video?
lukaluka9393 11 months ago
It is nice to see urban American style all over the planet now. 30 years ago, you could not get a mixer that held up to the rigors of scratching. We knew that shit would break if handled too harshly especially crossfaders. GLI would hold up, but they were 19inch rack mount mixers! The young guys come on and beat on theOld School guys. I know what it was like. It was costly. I was no tech until the military in 1988. I learned to open up shit and solder and all the stuff I paid techs to do.
NebKheru7 1 year ago
Nothing new. We were doing that in the 80s
NebKheru7 1 year ago
@NebKheru7 ppl who start scratching need to know the basics, you'll not start scratching with a 3click cresent flare / clover tears. check my last vid call 3click with double baby if you want a advanced scratch technic
supaphonik 1 year ago
@supaphonik The language you use is interesting. In the 80s we just messed around and whatever sounded slick or unique, we used them on our sets and during cassette tape recordings. I see there is a language in this arena now. This digital age is really nice and we are at no limit of what we can produce.Software, timecodes, Laptops. I like it. In the market for a hot PC or will more than likely buy a Macbook Pro.
NebKheru7 1 year ago
@supaphonik This is nothing new! Just like people thought Jazzy Jeff was the 1st with the transformer scratch. Back in the 80s when I had Radio Shack mixers, I used the line switches when the crossfader wore out. There was no user replace cross faders then. If I moved the switch slightly faster than the record, I created the same effect you see here. Same sound. A lot of these moves that are deemed "tricks" today were actually mistakes on the DJ's part. People come along and put names on it.
NebKheru7 1 year ago
@NebKheru7 just a reminder : dj flare invented the flare technic witch consist to start with the cross fader OPEN , then d-style came with the one click flare !
supaphonik 1 year ago
@NebKheru7 wrong! one click flare was invented in the 90s
supaphonik 1 year ago
@supaphonik Wrong on your part. North Carolina's DJ Kaos was doing this shit on 88.1 FM, NCSU's mix shows in 1987. This shit aiint new. Yeah Big name DJs will certainly get the credit, because they get the exposure. I got the recordings. back then there were no user replaceable crossfaders. We used the line switches until we either replaced the mixer or solder in another one, which took some time and ingenuity.
NebKheru7 1 year ago
gracias! Un video super!!
djfaze1200 1 year ago
People! Don't you all realize that english isn't the only language in the world? To be honest I don't understand him too because I can't speak french, but I do understand what he's doing cause I can watch his hands and that's the only thing you should pay attention to
Good tutorial and mad skills
Manyek 2 years ago 2
english please mate
BagZ8484 2 years ago
Merci beacoup pour tous les video dans le Tube!!!!
et pour comme tu ai nous les expliquées... pardon pour mon francaises. Grande Homme!!!
QARTCREW 2 years ago
Translate in English/Anglais PLEASE!
BringItBackC 2 years ago
learn to speak french! lol
supaphonik 2 years ago 3
thanks for all the com!
keep skratching people!!!
peace.
supa......
supaphonik 2 years ago
it was in french but i get the idea, cheers mate
tommyd9388 2 years ago 3
sounds like chirps
DJJohndice 2 years ago
Another hamster-style DJ...
Techspert 2 years ago
Is that wrong... ? : P
oDJOldskull 2 years ago
anyone tell me how to get that sample?
killtherats1 3 years ago
buy a scratch record. They are on nearly every one
PANDEMONIUMDJ 2 years ago
google breaks
hideo14 2 years ago
Super Seal Is Best
DJJohndice 2 years ago 2
search for scratch ahhhh or something, it's called the ahh sample, basically. usually it's on each side of every scratch record, multiple times. there are many different pitches/eq versions of it tho, sometimes it is hard to find one that sounds right to you (ie, enough mid range or no clip on either end)
xfenwrathx 2 years ago
dope
stew841 3 years ago
oh man that was awesome!
CelticsPride2 3 years ago
Niceone!
maciekkk123 3 years ago
niquel ton click flare bonne continuation a kan le beat juggling :)
rienafoutremec 3 years ago
super..merci pout ton conseil.eske tu as des sample ke tu peut partager??et osi fai plus de video plu long!!!A+
DijayFool 3 years ago
looking good mate
deepaintpish 3 years ago
nice! thx mate!
marcelxyz 3 years ago
gemini or numark mixer whats better ?
kirkstate 3 years ago
i think that numark is still better than gemini but it depends on the mixer model.
supaludo 3 years ago
Gemini aren't that hot in my opinion. I have a Vestax PMC05 Pro SL. 05's are the shizzle!
repo136 3 years ago
Vestax is quality
DrumNBassFace 3 years ago