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How I Mix – Drum and Bass Edition

So yeah… I picked up DJing during the pandemic. Everyone came out of lockdown with a random new skill – mine just so happened to involve spinning tunes instead of baking banana bread.

I started on Traktor gear, then eventually levelled up to Pioneer. Right now I’m using the Pioneer XDJ-XZ, at the time it was the closest thing you could get to a full CDJ setup without dropping £7k on actual CDJs. Lovely bit of kit if I say so myself.

Prepping the Tunes – The Workflow

Before any track even touches my library, it goes through two bits of software:

1. Mixed In Key

This checks the musical key so I know exactly what blends harmonically. It’ll also append the “Energy” of the track to the comment tags within the track.

2. Platinum Notes

Producers don’t follow a “volume standard.” Some tunes scream, some whisper. Platinum Notes levels everything out so your mix doesn’t suddenly smack someone in the face with a +6dB surprise.

3. Comment tags

Once I hear the track, I’ll add some hash tags to the comments section so I know the make up of the track. Things like #MaleVocals, #Mellow, #Banger, #Piano – these are elements within the track so I can find similar or complimentary tracks, not just by the energy and key.

Once those 3 are done, into Rekordbox they go, and that’s where the fun starts: Cueing, Tagging, Colour coding… basically turning chaos into order.

Understanding a DnB Track

When I first started mixing, I cut my teeth on Drum and Bass. Over time I realised you can make your life so much easier if you understand the structure and set up your tracks properly.

Beats, Bars & Phrases

Electronic music typically runs on a 4/4 signature – four beats to the bar.

A bar = 4 beats.
A phrase = a group of bars.

Most DnB phrases are 16 bars, which is 64 beats. That’s usually where something changes – a build, a drop, a switch-up, whatever.

Demo of a beat and a bar.

Beat, Bar & Phrase

The Usual Structure of a DnB Track

Most Drum and Bass tunes follow a pretty predictable shape:

  • Intro
  • Main Drop
  • Breakdown
  • Second Drop
  • Outro
Image showing the intro, build up, main section, breakdown, 2nd section and outro. The make up of a DnB track.

The make up of a DnB track.

 

This consistency is gold for DJs because it makes “mix-in” and “mix-out” points much easier to plan.

But here’s the twist…

Not all intros or breakdowns are the same length.
Some intros are 64 beats, some 128, some 256 — but they’re almost always divisible by 64.

Once I clocked that, I started dropping cue points every 64 beats. It turned track prep into a cheat code.

Cue Points & Colour Coding – My System

Cue points alone weren’t enough. On gear like CDJ-2000s, the waveform isn’t detailed enough to reliably tell when breakdowns or drops are coming.

So I colour code everything. My system’s simple:

Generic cue

Generic cue

Breakdowns and drops

Breakdowns and drops

Mix out cue

Mix out cue

Memory Marker for extra detail

Memory Marker for extra detail

 

This gives me a visual roadmap on the deck – especially useful when you’re mixing live and your brain is doing 700mph.

How I Actually Mix DnB

Once the tracks are analysed, corrected, cue’d, coloured, and ready… the main move is lining things up harmonically and structurally.

I’ll usually match:
– Breakdown of Track A
with
– Drop of Track B

That gives you that clean, energetic handover that sounds intentional rather than “oops.”

After that, you can get creative:

  • Mixing in mid-breakdown
  • Blending after the second drop
  • Riding vocals between verses
  • Double drops
  • Fake outs
  • Holding the tension before dropping the hammer

Once you get a feel for it, you start building little routines. Eventually you end up with something like this…

Tim McKnight
Tim McKnight
http://worldoftim.com

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