djdiggla Posted May 12, 2017 Share Posted May 12, 2017 Bucket list DJ to see for me. IDK if his setup has been posted before but really fascinating. Mixes on mixcloud toohttps://www.mixcloud.com/Mr_Scruff/ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest Symatic Posted May 12, 2017 Share Posted May 12, 2017 yeah its pretty sweet. funny you posted this now cos i was just talking to my mate who does lots of stage and sound work and has done Mr Scruff shows a few times, he was telling me about all the concrete and isolation stuff he uses because those grado carts are so sensitive, but once youve isolated them properly you get a really nice clean sound. badass stuff 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Solemn Posted May 12, 2017 Share Posted May 12, 2017 very impressive slippers Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Flexinoodle Posted May 13, 2017 Share Posted May 13, 2017 He's a good night out, i will give him that, but honestly, all that shit on the turntables, most of it is complete bullshit, and most of his 12hr set at o2 was fucking digital anyway.I swear these monkeys like to make out like they are something special for the sake of it, the guy cant mix that well either, it is mostly deck stops and long fades, very little beat mixing, like i said, good night out, something special, my arse ! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Nejo Posted May 13, 2017 Share Posted May 13, 2017 I'm guessing MK stands will do the job now... No more broken back with carrying all this concrete and steel table... I actually never had a real person feedback on those... Everyone on the web is just sayin' it annihilates the wobbling. Anyone has an experience with these over feet ? (this might be another thread sorry). Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
danswift Posted May 13, 2017 Share Posted May 13, 2017 I swear these monkeys like to make out like they are something special for the sake of ithehehe...if that isn't true sig worthy material right there, then I really don't know what is. 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest rasteri Posted May 13, 2017 Share Posted May 13, 2017 It's like he googled "stop turntable feedback" then said "fuck it, let's just do them all". TBH at least he puts some thought into his show prep, even if it's largely placebos. Most DJs of his stature charge twice as much to play a drunken 90min sync button set. 2 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest It'sPhilFromThursdays Posted May 13, 2017 Share Posted May 13, 2017 ^ Phew, i though "am i being a dick? He must know what he's doing", when i thought, "hmmm, from my knowledge that seems like really unnecassarily excessive isolation you're doing there" Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Karol Posted May 13, 2017 Share Posted May 13, 2017 I understand all this fuss about anti-wobbling tables but this guy is just making such a big deal of it. Got my turntables on a plain wooden table and the needle skips rather seldom. Mr Scruff or whatever he is called is a bit oversenetive I'd say. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Flexinoodle Posted May 14, 2017 Share Posted May 14, 2017 Like i said, it would be a bit more impressive if the fuckhead wasn't mostly digital anyway haha Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
d00ban Posted May 14, 2017 Share Posted May 14, 2017 To be fair that vid is 7 years old... So it was probably more justified. I've always enjoyed his sets... although I once lost a fresh bag of MDMA at one and everyone was pissed off at me the whole night lol. 2 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
djdiggla Posted May 14, 2017 Author Share Posted May 14, 2017 He's a good night out, i will give him that, but honestly, all that shit on the turntables, most of it is complete bullshit, and most of his 12hr set at o2 was fucking digital anyway.I swear these monkeys like to make out like they are something special for the sake of it, the guy cant mix that well either, it is mostly deck stops and long fades, very little beat mixing, like i said, good night out, something special, my arse !Yeah he doesn't mix much if at all. IDK if you can even back cue with those needles. But that's ok for me because I like what he plays. It's like a lot of beat diggers or David Rodigan... one of those DJs that kinda gets a pass for their musical knowledge and what you get to hear. 2 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest Symatic Posted May 14, 2017 Share Posted May 14, 2017 i love going out on a saturday with my mates to analyze the DJ's beat-matching skills, we all take notes and have a points system, and we collate the information at the end of the night and hand it in to the performers in a little presentation folder. it's pretty gangster, actually. 5 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
JHouse Posted May 14, 2017 Share Posted May 14, 2017 ^^^ Finally niggas be regulating. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Flexinoodle Posted May 14, 2017 Share Posted May 14, 2017 He's a good night out, i will give him that, but honestly, all that shit on the turntables, most of it is complete bullshit, and most of his 12hr set at o2 was fucking digital anyway.I swear these monkeys like to make out like they are something special for the sake of it, the guy cant mix that well either, it is mostly deck stops and long fades, very little beat mixing, like i said, good night out, something special, my arse !Yeah he doesn't mix much if at all. IDK if you can even back cue with those needles. But that's ok for me because I like what he plays. It's like a lot of beat diggers or David Rodigan... one of those DJs that kinda gets a pass for their musical knowledge and what you get to hear. I dunno it is all a bit pretentious after the first couple of times, his music barely changes gig to gig, and tea and slippers in the corridors, maybe i am just old, and yes beat matching does matter to me, but then i went out and DJed a lot in the rave era, a DJ who couldn't beat match simply got no work at all, and while some may think that worrying about a DJs beat matching skills is silly, when a venue of 10'000 is headfucked and stomping, dropping a beat is like punching a hole in their heart, it stops people dancing dead, the HipHop club with 500 heads who want to act gangster and rarely dance is massively different because beat matching is not very important. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
JHouse Posted May 15, 2017 Share Posted May 15, 2017 True, I am all about beat matching too. It's the cornerstone of DJn. Everything else is just icing, albeit incredibly delicious icing. What is a DJ if he can't mix? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
d00ban Posted May 15, 2017 Share Posted May 15, 2017 He's a good night out, i will give him that, but honestly, all that shit on the turntables, most of it is complete bullshit, and most of his 12hr set at o2 was fucking digital anyway.I swear these monkeys like to make out like they are something special for the sake of it, the guy cant mix that well either, it is mostly deck stops and long fades, very little beat mixing, like i said, good night out, something special, my arse !Yeah he doesn't mix much if at all. IDK if you can even back cue with those needles. But that's ok for me because I like what he plays. It's like a lot of beat diggers or David Rodigan... one of those DJs that kinda gets a pass for their musical knowledge and what you get to hear. I dunno it is all a bit pretentious after the first couple of times, his music barely changes gig to gig, and tea and slippers in the corridors, maybe i am just old, and yes beat matching does matter to me, but then i went out and DJed a lot in the rave era, a DJ who couldn't beat match simply got no work at all, and while some may think that worrying about a DJs beat matching skills is silly, when a venue of 10'000 is headfucked and stomping, dropping a beat is like punching a hole in their heart, it stops people dancing dead, the HipHop club with 500 heads who want to act gangster and rarely dance is massively different because beat matching is not very important. I'm not being funny but Mr Scruff plays a lot of different music at different tempos. I imagine a lot of rave music you were playing was at a similar tempo no? (like most "dance" music). I'm not saying you can't string tracks together if you're playing lots of music, but sometimes you can tell a better story if you're not constrained by BPM. I think that's what Mr Scruff is going for and why people go to watch him. Also, 5 hours is a pretty long time, it's not like he can cut and chop like Jazzy Jeff or DJ Numark through the whole thing is it? 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
DJ Rock Well Posted May 15, 2017 Share Posted May 15, 2017 I don't get the anti-Scruff chatter at all... You have to remember he approaches DJing from the perspective of a digger and lover of collecting/discovering music. His whole attitude is about presenting the music he loves in the absolute best way possible. Hence the Rega arms, Grado carts, master EQ for balancing the sound balance of older and newer music. He's publically stated he's not interested in the technical side of DJing many times and that he likes to play a song in its entirety whenever possible - on a personal note, I love mixing and scratching on some genres of music, but on a lot of old music it just makes everything sound like fucking Jive Bunny and there's nothing I want to hear less. As for playing off CDJs? If that's the way he has music, so be it. It's not about what it's played on, just how good the music is. For the whole sound quality debate, there are plenty of venues where you'd be pushed to hear the difference but there are still plenty where you can hear it. Again I get the whole idea of discovering music you love and wanting to present it in the best way possible. To a degree that explains the concrete blocks and foam extremity... but also, if you're playing quiet old 45s on Vestax decks (even with his custom foam lagging) at a venue with a massive sound system and a poorly isolated stage, that's what you need to avoid a volume limiting bass feedback loop. Anyone with even rudimentary knowledge of sound system culture can tell you all about concrete slabs on foam. Beyond the technical stuff, even if his thing's not for you, I think all DJs should respect one thing about him - he's one of very few DJs in the world these days who actually gets celebrated and has people go to his gigs to hear music they DON'T know already. Seriously, how many DJs these days at least have to intersperse deep crates choices with a few tracks the dance floor already know? People go to Scruff gigs to place their trust in the DJ and let him introduce them to great music they've never heard before. 4 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
jeljms Posted May 15, 2017 Share Posted May 15, 2017 Fine words both, D00ban and Rock Well. I've seen Mr Scruff DJ a few times and each time he completely rocked it - great tunes, great programming and it flowed together so well that it felt like he was mixing everything (and I would argue that he was) even though he didn't beatmatch everything. I remember him putting together that Amerie track One Thing with Roots Manuva's Witness over the top and it was fantastic. For me, beatmatching is one of a number of techniques to mix records together rather than the only one and if you don't agree, check out that Jazzy Jeff Boiler Room London mix and see how seemless it feels even though he probably beatmatched about a third of it. The rest were really nice segues featuring well-timed delays, echoes and other effects. I'm not saying that being able to beatmatch isn't important and it is definitely more important in some genres than others, but Mr Scruff is probably the wrong target because he is a really, really good dj whether he is beatmatching or not. 3 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Flexinoodle Posted May 16, 2017 Share Posted May 16, 2017 Wait, are people here comparing Scruff to Jazzy Jeff ?Sorry, not having it at all. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
d00ban Posted May 16, 2017 Share Posted May 16, 2017 Wait, are people here comparing Scruff to Jazzy Jeff ? Not really no Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
DJ Rock Well Posted May 16, 2017 Share Posted May 16, 2017 No they're very different entities... Firstly, Mr Scruff never tangled with Uncle Phil. Secondly, Jeff played in Hastings three weeks ago and about a third of his set was classic hip hop and the other two thirds was trap, modern R&B and hip hop and even a bit of semi-mumble rap. A few older heads were grumbling but they overlooked that most of the audience were young and Jeff (ever the professional) read the crowd, knew what was required of him and played them what they knew/wanted. Conversely, when Scruff played the same venue a few years back, he brought all his kit, did the whole night himself and played a set that was full of tracks the dancefloor hadn't heard before. It's not that anybody's really comparing the two, just stating that Scruff has his strengths that I do personally admire and it's interesting that even when compared to a great like Jeff, his own little niche still stands up for what it is. 2 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
djdiggla Posted May 16, 2017 Author Share Posted May 16, 2017 Mr Scruff never tangled with Uncle Phil. Sig! 2 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Flexinoodle Posted May 16, 2017 Share Posted May 16, 2017 Scruff gets huge crowds, Jeff played here in Exeter a few months back to 200 people, in terms of skillsets, one is a DJ in the best sense of the word, the other is Disco Keith and his saturday night "Now music" selection, who would i rather watch, Jeff, who would i rather go to a night of, Scruff, but that really means nothing, I go to download every year, and i fucking despise Metal Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
JHouse Posted May 19, 2017 Share Posted May 19, 2017 check out that Jazzy Jeff Boiler Room London mix and see how seemless it feels even though he probably beatmatched about a third of it. The rest were really nice segues featuring well-timed delays, echoes and other effects.That's prolly my favorite Boiler Room set, plus he's my 2nd favorite DJ right behind MMM. I like various methods of mixing, from slamming to seamless, which both DJs execute pretty well. Variety is usually in order. Jazzy Jeff really has it all down, not to mention super clean. That dude is such a pro. Music selection is tits, too. 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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