Getting into djing was incredible. We had a friend working in a local music shop, they had gigantic rooms filled with guitars and pianos, but once djing became a thing they started dedicated a little angle to pioneer and Cdjs.<p>They let us playing on 2 cdjs 1000, with an Allen Heat mixer. Deadmau5 was the most played there, 2010 was an amazing year for electronic music. People kept increasing, things started breaking and we had to find something else. I've worked an entire summer 10 hours per day to afford two CDJ 900, then I bought a Reloop DJM and started organizing parties.<p>Those years will always remain in my heart. The energy, the people, I just think that some experiences will stay within your soul for the rest of your life. But if there's something I'll never understand is why the business world behind music and entertainment in general is so rot and broken. Maybe drugs, maybe the desire to get easy money, most of the people involved in parties just want to squeeze people for money, from location owners to PRs. If you don't have the guts to enter this "Mors tua Vita mea" cycle you're getting ripped off and left behind.<p>Your only hope was finding those two or three trusted friends and fight together against the rest of the world, until the last breath.<p>God, I miss those times.
I still have a collection of older CDJs. A lot of my friends bought into the CDJ100s, but I abhorred those decks. Coming from vinyl, they just did not have a feel that felt good at all. Once the CDJ1000s came out, I finally felt that the decks had a feel that didn't feel gross. If you've never been a vinyl DJ, it's really hard to describe what it was that just wasn't right. The CDJs just felt light, cheap, plasticy, etc. Everyone felt this way, and that's why they kept changing until they got closest with the CDJ1000 and later.<p>To this day, I still prefer to play vinyl. There's just something about putting your hands directly on the medium. Yes, needles, scratches, pops, dust, all degrade the sound blah blah, but I still love it regardless.
I've got 4x XDJ, 2x turntables and a mixer setup in the front room of the house :-). DJing is my creative outlet, a way for me to escape reality for a fee hours at a time.<p>I can either use DVS to "simulate" vinyl (laptop required), use actual vinyl or plug in several USBs.
I had thought serato paired with vinyl control records on traditional Technics MK2s was the sort-of stack of choice.<p>Are people using CDs and these devices commonly today?
I’ve just recently got back into it again with a small controller after having a break for a decade, and am having a great time, I started with vinyl then CDJs.<p>I’m using Beatport Link for my music which is incredible, but it doesn’t match vinyl shopping and really getting to know your tracks, as I already have 200 songs in various playlists and barely know the names of any of them.