- Oct 2024
-
www.youtube.com www.youtube.com
-
Put tracks between each pair of songs to highlight the journey with a natural flow.
About four landmarks for an hour long playlist.
-
Go from the end to the beginning. Tell a story
-
Excellent vid on playlists
-
-
www.youtube.com www.youtube.com
-
Some worked examples of working song transitions.
-
-
www.youtube.com www.youtube.com
-
Best methods for mixing: - Same number, same letter - Same number, different letter This is the absolute best method for mixing compatibility for a tonal shift - Same letter, 1 difference in number (+1/-1)
Other Methods (less reliable but still useful at times): - Semitone Shift (+7 number, same letter) - Full tone shift (+/- 2 number, same letter) - Compatible tone shift: -3 number, different letter - Diagonal switch (+/- 1 number, different letter
All this is due to the overlap in notes within the respective scales. Most of this is also dependent on the tracks being played and their notes.
-
Best video I have seen on the camelot wheel and mixing keys.
-
-
-
An example of this would be if you were mixing in F-major, which is 7B on the Camelot Wheel, you can transition by 3 spaces to its counterpart to F-minor, which is 4A on the Camelot system. In other words, to get from F-Major to F-minor, you subtract 3 and switch letters.
Subtract (or add) 3 and switch letters
-
A simple technique when it comes to harmonic mixing is by simply going from a major key to a minor, or a minor to a major key, whilst staying in the same relative key. For example, if a DJ is mixing in the key of 8B-C major, then he/she can transition to 8A-A minor or vice versa. Just keep the number the same (in this example it is 8) whilst changing the letter (B to A).
Number same, letter different.
-
-
-
Can mix by energy and key... Have software show related key and bpm. Filter by your own energy tags.
Tags
Annotators
URL
-
-
www.youtube.com www.youtube.com
-
Chris M. suggests to keep track of emotions/vibes to build certain kinds of playlists easier.
-
Can also categorize by time... Mostly related to music energy.
-
Chris M. suggests to start building a playlist with the end in mind. This is logical because it's easier to backtrack transitions then to do it forward.
Edit: This he suggested in a different video, not this one.
-
Playing into the idea of transitions... Perhaps it's useful to keep small playlists with only a handful of songs (3-5) that are PERFECT together. This can be used as a sort of repository for the creation of larger playlists later to save time.
-
Good videos about playlists.
-
-
www.youtube.com www.youtube.com
-
Transitions he mentions: - A) Instant RAGE Slower Song -> Instant Drop Instant Drop = a song that immediately pulls up the speed. - B) Slow Down, Speed Up Hype song with a gradual slow down, leading into an immediate speed up. Kick or beat drop from track 2. - C) Vibez to Vibez Track 1 to Track 2 while remaining energy (energy the same) but switching the genres. - D) Get up and Dance Weird ending that you CAN'T dance to leading into something that you HAVE to dance to. - E) The SLOW DOWN Song pace doesn't matter. Slow Ending to a Slow Beginning. - F) The Lit Switch Lead one LIT song seamlessly into another LIT song, regardless of genre. It maintains hype level. - G) Is that the same X Have a similar sounding X playing at the end of track 1 and at the beginning of track 2... X can be anything, for example an instrument/guitar. - H) Weird BUT Effective Track 2 starts with a sound effect and you use that to transition seamlessly with track 1. - I) The Dip/The Rip Track A with decent pace to Track B (slowest song of the 3) to Track C which starts slow but picks up the pace again Can be reversed into the hip... Then the middle song is the fastest song.
-
The distinguisher between a great playlist and a normal playlist is the flow between each songs. In other words, the transitions.
-
Excellent video on the creation of playlists.
-