A Trak Weighs In On #RealDJing: Where Do You Stand?

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A Trak Weighs In On #RealDJing: Where Do You Stand?

If anyone is an authority on DJ’ing past and present it’s A Trak and he will let you know this (at least once a year) do we listen? Of course you dingbat because it’s A Trak! Say what you will but his skill as a DJ is on another echelon next to the usual suspects. After telling Avicii and the bottle service crew to pull their heads in last year the conversation has shifted towards what is DJ’ing today and where is it going. Taking to instagram the Fool’s Gold captain weighed in:

“There’s a lot of talk lately about what DJing is becoming. I’ve seen it evolve a lot over the years. I started DJing when I was 13, scratching vinyl and playing strictly hip hop, winning championships. The DMC judges thought I was pretty good at it, but think my definition was narrow back then. I remember when my aunts and uncles found out I was a DJ they assumed I was the guy talking on the radio. So to define who we were, we called ourselves turntablists. We wanted legitimacy. As I grew up I got into more sides of the craft. Party-rocking and mastering different musical genres. In the early 2000′s I was Serato’s very first endorsee. I remember talking to Jazzy Jeff and AM about Serato: was it stable enough? We also had to convert all our music. DJing was becoming digital. Then Kanye hired me to tour with him, because he learned how to perform from Common and Kweli who had real DJs too – shout out to Dummy & Ruckus. We went on an Usher tour and Kanye wanted me to bust solos. My routines were too specialized so I had to make new ones that this new audience would understand. I started seeing the bigger picture. Then I got into electronic music. I remember seeing Mehdi, Boys Noize, Feadz playing on CDJs and thinking: these guys are turntablists too. Surkin was the first guy I saw DJ on Ableton in a way that felt like true DJing too. Now there’s a whole new cast in electronic music, and it’s still exciting to me. I’ve seen a lot of fads come and go over the years. And I don’t think my way of DJing is the only way. I wish I could also play like Carl Cox and DJ Harvey too. But I have my style and it’s my passion. I love standing for something that means something, as Pharcyde would say. When you come to my show you know you’ll see me cut. And take risks. DJing is about taking risks. I represent #RealDJing #YouKnowTheDifference

It’s on point, you do know the difference when you see it but this isn’t some kind of battle royale with a clear winner it’s about the conversation…..where do you stand? Where do you see DJ’ing as skill, as a lifestyle and an art today and where do you see it in the future?

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