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'93 DJ Champion

            In 1993 "The Inland Northwest Battle of the DJ's" took place at the Hamilton Recreation Center[1] in Spokane, Washington. At the time, there was a lot of rivalry between GMS and other Northwest DJ's. However, despite the many other DJ's who claimed to be better than GMS, most of them refused to compete against him. But after watching GMS at this battle, the true reason for his adversary’s refusal to compete was apparent: GMS's turntable skills, creativity, and showmanship were incredible and undoubtedly superior to his rivals.

            The Center was packed when GMS took the stage. GMS started the battle with his classic "Rock the Bells"[2] routine, flawlessly manipulating two copies of the record back-&-forth with absolute precision, combining his ability to beat juggle and perform phenomenally fast Transform Scratching.[3] Then, GMS switched records[4] and cut-up two copies of the La Di Da Di/Al Nayfish/Peter Piper mini-edit[5] released on NastyMix Records[6] -- GMS did quick pitch/speed changing techniques, transforming, juggling, and back-&-forth cutting (alternating hands behind-the-back/under-the-legs and left & right spins) -- which drove the crowd crazy! At this point, some DJ's actually dropped out of the battle. GMS went on to rock the house by mixing up crowd favorites and classic jams,[7] while continuing to employ incredible turntable techniques. One such technique GMS perfected was the ability to pick up the turntable needle while the record was playing, pause, and then drop it on the exact spot to continue the mix.

            After GMS's performance, not only did he win The Inland Northwest Battle of the DJ's, but his reputation as one of the best DJ's grew to legendary proportions.

 

 


[1] The Hamilton Rec Center was started in 1992 by John & Michelle Mines as a place to help keep kids in Spokane off the streets and out of gangs. GMS regularly volunteered his time and services to help keep the Center open. Unfortunately, the Center closed in 1994.

[2] Rock the Bells is the classic record by LL Cool J.

[3] GMS's Transform Scratch was so fast that it sounded more like the Crab Scratch!

[4] GMS stacked his records on top of each other!

[5] This was on a B-side of a Criminal Nation 12-inch.

[6] NastyMix Records was the label that launched Sir Mix-A-Lot's career. NastyMix was started by Nasty Nes, Sir Mix-A-Lot, & Ed Locke.

[7] Aside from the usual battle records, some of the records GMS mixed that night were Rump Shaker by Wrecks-N-Effect, The Choice is Yours by Black Sheep, Jump Around by House of Pain, Baby Got Back by Sir Mix-A-Lot, 122 BPM Jive Rhythm Trax, and Egypt Egypt by the Egyptian Lover, among many others.

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