You make this stuff look super easy; everything seems to hinge upon knowing basic scratches, hand movements, and fader grip. Those things take PATIENCE because you have to put time into training, and you have to HAVE the time to put in. Doing this in under an hour and a half is encouraging to rookies like me. I feel like once I get to advanced scratches and beat juggling, you have already given me the tutorial to put a routine together. BADJS is the place that appears to have it all! Salute! 💪🏿
This is so dope to watch how you created a battle routine from scratch. Although it can be intimidating to a newer DJ, it’s very inspiring at the same time. Thanks for all you have done for the Brolic Army.
Good look behind the scenes Rob, so in the good ole days before cue points, was it legal to have people passing you records with stickers during a battle, or would you more often try to work sounds in from the same battle records like i see Craze do during his 1999 winning set, hee haw breaks is there i think i remember..?
6 Comments on A Guide to Composing a Battle Routine