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George Spivey (born June 21, 1968), known professionally as DJ Scratch, is an American hip hop DJ and producer from Brooklyn, New York. [1]DJ Scratch is the 1988 New Music Seminar Battle For World Supremacy DJ champion, the 2010 Master of the Mix winner and the 2012, 2013 & 2014 Global Spin Awards' "Turntablist of the Year". 19 albums produced by DJ Scratch were certified Gold in United States ...
01. Intro (featuring DJ Scratch, Kareem, Storm & Kau Kidau) 02. Flipmode Iz da Squad (featuring Busta Rhymes, Lord Have Mercy, Serious & Spliff Star) 04. Talk of the Town; 05. Get the Money and Dip (featuring Busta Rhymes) 08. Flipmode Enemy #1 (featuring Serious) 10. Conquer da World (featuring Meka) 11. Hall of Fame; 14. Rampage Outro
The table below lists the mixes in the game, including the two songs that contribute to their mix as well as their individual artists; the mix artist that created the mix; whether the song is playable in the game's DJ vs Guitar mode; and the career tier in which the song is located. [4] [5]
Pages in category "Songs written by DJ Scratch" The following 5 pages are in this category, out of 5 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. D. Do My Thing; G.
Pages in category "Albums produced by DJ Scratch" The following 56 pages are in this category, out of 56 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. A.
Scratch is the soundtrack to the 2001 documentary Scratch directed by Doug Pray. Scratch examines cultural and historical perspectives on the birth and evolution of hip-hop disc jockeys (DJs), scratching and turntablism and includes interviews with some of hip-hop's most famous and respected DJs.
James Hyman from Music Week's RM Dance Update rated the song five out of five, adding, "Imagine the inane style of Biz Markie mixed up with a pinch of Leaders Of The New School, Ol' Dirty Bastard (who appears on one mix) plus phat production from the likes of DJ Scratch & J.D. (Pharcyde, De La Soul, A Tribe Called Quest, Slum Village) and you ...
The DJ software uses this data (e.g., about how fast the platter is spinning) to determine the playback status, speed, scratch sound of the hardware turntables, etc., and it duplicates these effects on the digital audio files or computer tracks the DJ is using.