#14582 by Craig Maxim
Sat Oct 27, 2007 6:11 am
Sat Oct 27, 2007 6:11 am
This question posed by Irminsul has been perplexing me for awhile now. The question was whether DJ's are instrumentalists or not.
I think it is not as cut and dry these days.
While I see that most here say "no" to that question, I lean to "yes", because the modern DJ, or so-called "DJ Elite" do not fit so easily in the former category of a person that drops a record on a turntable and maybe "scratches" the record occassionally, and little else.
What they are doing these days, is far more advanced than that. I would direct you to people like "Paul Oakenfold" perhaps one of the most famous DJ's today. His "music" and "remixes" are featured in albums, on the radio, in movie soundtracks, and the like. He has performed with the Boston Pops and a few other orchestras, with composers even writing pieces for him.
Conceivably, a musician could endure standing at attention during three movements of a Symphony, only to strike a triangle several times, maybe even just once. He is a musician, no matter how small his role, and his instrument is the triangle. Or maybe someone who plays the cymbals. He may strike them only once, now and again, and I suppose no one would question his role as a bonofide musician.
DJ's of the caliber of Paul Oakenfold, to me, could qualify as musicians, with their turntables being the instrument. Realizing of course, that it is, really a collaborative effort of sorts, with the original artists they sample or spin, even still, these DJ Elites, are the ones manipulating or playing the turntables and mixing the sound sources, whether music or sound effects, or beats, or mere bass lines, and manipulating, LIVE, all of these elements to produce music that is quite distinct, even amazingly so, than the original artists they are from. In some cases, the remixed work, is far more famous than the elemental parts they were derived from.
So, whether a musician or not, these days, DJ's are certainly performers. One could say they are arrangers as well. Possibly even composers. Why not artists?
Here is Paul Oakenfold performing with members of the Florida Classical Orchestra...
http://youtube.com/watch?v=nHr_ZZJvKqg
I think it is not as cut and dry these days.
While I see that most here say "no" to that question, I lean to "yes", because the modern DJ, or so-called "DJ Elite" do not fit so easily in the former category of a person that drops a record on a turntable and maybe "scratches" the record occassionally, and little else.
What they are doing these days, is far more advanced than that. I would direct you to people like "Paul Oakenfold" perhaps one of the most famous DJ's today. His "music" and "remixes" are featured in albums, on the radio, in movie soundtracks, and the like. He has performed with the Boston Pops and a few other orchestras, with composers even writing pieces for him.
Conceivably, a musician could endure standing at attention during three movements of a Symphony, only to strike a triangle several times, maybe even just once. He is a musician, no matter how small his role, and his instrument is the triangle. Or maybe someone who plays the cymbals. He may strike them only once, now and again, and I suppose no one would question his role as a bonofide musician.
DJ's of the caliber of Paul Oakenfold, to me, could qualify as musicians, with their turntables being the instrument. Realizing of course, that it is, really a collaborative effort of sorts, with the original artists they sample or spin, even still, these DJ Elites, are the ones manipulating or playing the turntables and mixing the sound sources, whether music or sound effects, or beats, or mere bass lines, and manipulating, LIVE, all of these elements to produce music that is quite distinct, even amazingly so, than the original artists they are from. In some cases, the remixed work, is far more famous than the elemental parts they were derived from.
So, whether a musician or not, these days, DJ's are certainly performers. One could say they are arrangers as well. Possibly even composers. Why not artists?
Here is Paul Oakenfold performing with members of the Florida Classical Orchestra...
http://youtube.com/watch?v=nHr_ZZJvKqg