![]() I play some mellow dubstep in my sets (and incidentally some mellow “liquid” drum & bass too, which is another genre that arguably shares the characteristic we’re discussing). Which BPM range you ultimately go with thus depends really on the style – but to an extent it also depends on what other music you DJ with. For instance, I DJ a mixed-genre bar set at my beach bar gig, which has material from ambient and chill out, through to slo-mo disco, nu-disco, house, and then broken beats / drum and bass. Both could be right for exactly the same tune, and your software may go either way with it too when auto BPMing for you. Let’s discount the pop tunes (that could be any BPM really), and focus on the dancefloor tunes in this style.ĭubstep tends to be around 140BPM, but as you guess, it could also more usefully be around 70BPM, if you decide it “feels” spacier and slower. What’s right? And should I be concerned about this?” Digital DJ Tips says: Again, there seems to be no fixed BPM range like with house etc. My research shows that there’s also a debate about whether dubstep should be classified at 70BPM (on the kick drums) or 140BPM (on the hi-hats etc.). I also hear on the radio house music and pop music that has dubstep elements. Digital DJ Tips reader DJ-eZ writes: “I run Virtual DJ, and it shows wildly varying BPMs on different dubstep tracks. ![]()
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