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  1. Turntablist transcription methodology. Turntablist Transcription Methodology, or TTM, is a notation system for scratching and turntablism. The system was founded by John Carluccio in 1997. [1] A seminal booklet detailing the system was written and published by John Carluccio, industrial designer Ethan Imboden and DJ Raedawn in 2000. [2]

  2. Pages in category "Turntablism". The following 12 pages are in this category, out of 12 total. This list may not reflect recent changes . Turntablism.

  3. Apr 3, 2009 · Turntablism is the art of manipulating sounds and creating music using phonograph turntables and a DJ mixer. The word 'turntablist' was coined in 1995 by DJ Babu [ 1 ] to describe the difference between a DJ who just plays records, and one who performs by touching and moving the records, stylus and mixer to manipulate sound.

  4. But turntablism is an art form that technically could use any genre/type of music. Calling turntablism a type of music is like calling hip-hop a type of music. Hip-hop is the culture, the genre/type of music is "Rap". Turntablism is an Art, the genre/type of music usually rap, but can be anything. --DJBryson 18:34, 10 December 2006 (UTC) Reply

  5. Bienvenidos a Wikipedia, la enciclopedia de contenido libre que todos pueden editar . Buscar en 1 947 941 artículos. 1 947 941 artículos en español. Café.

  6. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › DJ_QbertDJ Qbert - Wikipedia

    turntablism. Occupation (s) Disc jockey, composer. Years active. 1990–present. Website. djqbert .com. Richard Quitevis (born October 7, 1969) known by his stage name DJ Qbert or Qbert, [2] is an American turntablist and composer. He was awarded America's Best DJ in 2010, was DMC USA Champion 1991 (solo) and achieved titles as DMC World ...

  7. Turntablism goes digital (and some DJs hate it) Within a relatively short burst of technical innovation in the early 2000s, most of the seeds were sown for the future of turntablism and DJing more generally. It was a period that began with the rise of Napster and MP3s in 1999, and ended with the release of Serato Scratch Live in 2004.

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