Hi everyone, I'm making a mix and I'm looking for some fast moving dnb tracks in 89-92 bpm range. It could be any subgenre.
Thanks
Yeah i mean 180 bpm... i usually say 90 since it rolls off the tongue better.I think maybe you mean 180bpm drum and bass? (are you counting the Snares and coming up with 90bpm? )
DnB is typically 160-180bpm, occasionally a little faster, anything ~140bpm is breaks, lower than that and you are heading into downbeat/leftfield/hiphop
If you are playing dnb at 180 bpm you are doing it severely wrong imo
If you are playing dnb at 180 bpm you are doing it severely wrong imo
nonsense. dnb is 160-180bpm, always has been, always will be.
LOL!
Mate, i play my sets 181bpm and above... the crowd don't seem to mind too much :p
agreed mate, i wasn't saying everyone should play their sets that fast, i was merely pointing out the naivety of the comment posterI'm guessing it depends on what type of D&B you're playing? I tend to play 170-172!
If you are playing dnb at 180 bpm you are doing it severely wrong imo
Hasn't always been that way, nor is it guaranteed to stay this way, but yeah, many DJs have a tendency to play out tunes at 180 give or take.
Also I think OP is looking for tracks already at 180 + without having to up the pitch...
This one e.g is a staggering 188 bpm
Embers breaks are made with sticks at 75 bpm.what hasn't always been that way? the 160-180 I quoted has been a standard range of tempo's for dnb for as long as I have been listening to it, getting on for 20 years now...
of course there are some that are a little faster, but exceptions don't make a rule - and the tempo dj's play at is a different topic completly
Nowhat hasn't always been that way? the 160-180 I quoted has been a standard range of tempo's for dnb for as long as I have been listening to it, getting on for 20 years now...
of course there are some that are a little faster, but exceptions don't make a rule - and the tempo dj's play at is a different topic completly