The Rhythm Killers - Breakin And Entering Volume 03 - Drum Drops - DJ Turntablist Tools
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Price | £6.50 |
Track ListingA1 To This Roots (117 BPM)A2 Riding Low (95.5 BPM) A3 Different Strokes (147 BPM) A4 Murder She Wrote (95.5 BPM) A5 Lookin\' Back (89.5 BPM) B1 Death In The Arena (138 BPM) B2 Skin Tight (112 BPM) B3 Swell Head (112 BPM) B4 Finders Keepers (82 BPM) B5 After Dark (88 BPM) Media Condition » Very Good Plus (VG+) Sleeve Condition » Very Good (VG) |
Artist | The Rhythm Killers | ||
Title | Breakin And Entering Volume 03 | ||
Label | Drum Drops | ||
Catalogue | DDBE1003 | ||
Format | Vinyl Album | ||
Released | 2001 | ||
Genre | DJ Turntablist Tools |
Other Titles by The Rhythm Killers
• Breakin And Entering Vol 02 •
Some Other Artists in the DJ Turntablist Tools Genre• Jeep Beat Collective • DJ LBR • Jimmie Walker • Havana Hoodz • Elisha La'Verne • Vinyl Toolbox vol1 • No Artist • DJ A.P. • Raw Flavors • The Horse • Roc Raida • X-Rated • Original Unknown DJ's, The • DJ Cue • Groove Boys • Nuyorican Soul • Vand Vand • Daft Punk • The Original Unknown DJ's • Bionic Needle Burner, The & DJ Tox side c&d only • Dj Hertz • Skratch Weapons • Skratchy Seal • Le Jad & Ligone • DJ Q-Bert • Butchwax/Darth Fader/Wax Fondler • Unknown Artist • DJ Streak • Turntable Dragun'z & DJ Majestic • Homespun • Simon Harris • DJ Rectangle • Cutmaster Swift • Beastie Boys • Scratchaholics • DJ Toolz • Reynald Deschamps • Bionic Needle Burner, The & DJ Tox • Twizt • DJ Producer, The • |
Some Other Artists on the Drum Drops Label• |
Information on the DJ Turntablist Tools Genre
Vinyl records with samples and beats for use creative turntablist DJ's. Turntablism is the art of manipulating sounds and creating music using phonograph turntables or digital turntables and a DJ mixer. The word 'turntablist' was coined in 1995 by DJ Babu to describe the difference between a DJ who just plays records, and one who performs by touching and moving the records, stylus and mixer to manipulate sound. The new term co-occurred with a resurgence of the art of hip hop style DJing in the 1990s.John Oswald described the art: "A phonograph in the hands of a 'hiphop/scratch' artist who plays a record like an electronic washboard with a phonographic needle as a plectrum, produces sounds which are unique and not reproduced -- the record player becomes a musical instrument."
Hip-hop turntablist DJs use turntable techniques like beat mixing/matching, scratching, and beat juggling. Some turntablists seek to have themselves recognized as legitimate musicians capable of interacting and improvising with other performers. Some focus on turntable technique while others craft intricate compositions by focusing on mixing.
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