lo unico que te puedo decir es lo que vi en el creamfields, 3 cjds, supongo que pionner 1000 ó 1200 y un plato de vinilos, de mixer lei en algun sitio que usa la pionner la djm700
habia un articulo interesante en la remix
“I must tell you that the beat from ‘Deny Selected’ is made from the SNES game Street Fighter,” Ridha confesses. ”I sampled kicks and punches from the game and programmed the beat.” Also arranged with his Roland TR-808, TR-909 and Elektron Machinedrum, Ridha was aiming at highly danceable beats when putting together Oi Oi Oi. The abrasive assortment rides an uneven electronic rhythm section, but it's supposed to get people to crowd the floor. “I thought it was good to put the tracks together as one piece on a CD, but to me it's not an album because there's not really a ‘story’ or anything; it's more a collection of Boys Noize singles that all bang in the club.”
Crowd pleasers aside, some of Ridha's works beckon to be absorbed at home. The Depeche Mode remix is a headphone essential for the beat pulses, the two-note sirens that Ridha built with his Korg MS-20 and the original's signature breaths and grim synth riffs, now way up in the mix. Texturally intricate moments like those made it onto Oi Oi Oi as well and might go unnoticed in less-than-intimate listening sessions.
“When I listen some of the new French producers, I think they sometimes use way too much compression that hides bad production,” Ridha says. “Compression can make the track very exciting. The elements can work together in a cool way, but too much compression can fuck up everything, losing the attack and the track's dynamic. In the end, it just sounds like a pot of mud, where everything isn't defined.”
http://remixmag.com/artists/electronic/ ... oys_noize/