Mix, mixes, mixture or mixing may refer to:

Contents

Science and mathematics [link]

Music and radio [link]

People [link]

Places [link]

In the United States:

Other [link]

See also [link]


https://wn.com/Mix

DJ mix

A DJ mix or DJ mixset is a sequence of musical tracks typically mixed together to appear as one continuous track. DJ mixes are usually performed using a DJ mixer and multiple sounds sources, such as turntables, CD players, digital audio players or computer sound cards, sometimes with the addition of samplers and effects units, although it's possible to create one using sound editing software.

DJ mixing is significantly different from live sound mixing. Remix services were offered beginning in the late 1970s in order to provide music which was more easily beatmixed by DJs for the dancefloor. One of the earliest DJs to refine their mixing skills was DJ Kool Herc.Francis Grasso was the first DJ to use headphones and a basic form of mixing at the New York nightclub Sanctuary. Upon its release in 2000, Paul Oakenfold's Perfecto Presents: Another World became the biggest selling dj mix album in the US.

Music

A DJ mix is often put together with music from genres that fit into the more general term electronic dance music. Other genres mixed by DJ includes hip hop, breakbeat and disco. Four on the floor disco beats can be used to create seamless mixes so as to keep dancers locked to the dancefloor. Two of main characteristics of music used in dj mixes is a dominant bassline and repetitive beats. Music mixed by djs usually has a tempo which ranges from 120 bpm up to 160 bpm.

Mix (Stellar album)

Mix is the debut studio album by New Zealand Pop rock band Stellar, released by Sony BMG on 29 July 1999. The album debuted at #2 on the RIANZ albums chart, and after seven weeks within the top 10 would finally reach the #1 position. The album would spend a whole 18 weeks within the top 10 on the charts. The album was certified 5x platinum, meaning that it had sold over 75,000 copies in New Zealand.

The album was re-released on 18 February 2000 as a limited edition which included a new cover art and a bonus CD-rom that included the music videos for the singles "Part of Me", "Violent" and "Every Girl" as well as three remixes (these had appeared on previous singles) and an 8-minute documentary. Even after the limited edition's run had finished, all subsequent pressings of the album would feature the new cover.

Mix became the 22nd best-selling album in 2000 in New Zealand. At the New Zealand Music Awards in 2000, Mix won the Album of the Year award.

Track listing

Singles

Shake

Shake may refer to:

  • Handshake
  • Milkshake
  • Tremor
  • Music

    Albums

  • Shake (John Schlitt album) (1995)
  • Shake! (album) (1968), by the Siegel–Schwall Band
  • Shake (2001), by Zucchero Fornaciari
  • Songs

  • "Shake" (Sam Cooke song) (1964), notably covered by Otis Redding
  • "Shake!" (The Time song) (1990)
  • "Shake" (EliZe song) (2004)
  • "Shake" (Ying Yang Twins song) (2005)
  • "Shake" (Jesse McCartney song) (2010)
  • "Shake" (Little Boots song) (2011)
  • "Shake" (Flavour N'abania song) (2012)
  • "Shake" (1993), from the album Concentration by Machines of Loving Grace
  • "Shake" (1999), by Double
  • "Shake" (2009), by Chae Yeon
  • "Shake" (2009), from The Alesha Show: The Encore by Alesha Dixon
  • "Shake" (2013), by Victoria Justice
  • "Shake" (2013), from Let's Be Still by The Head and the Heart
  • People

  • Anthony "Shake" Shakir, Detroit techno producer
  • Master Shake, a character in Aqua Teen Hunger Force
  • Sheikh Abdullah Ahmad or Shake, Malaysian singer
  • Other

  • Shake (company), a legal document startup
  • Shake (shingle), a wooden shingle made from split logs
  • Shake! (album)

    Shake! is an album by the blues-rock group the Siegel–Schwall Band. Their third album, it was released in 1968 by Vanguard Records as a vinyl LP. It was later re-released as a CD, also on the Vanguard label.

    Shake! was the group's last album to feature Jack Dawson on bass guitar and Russ Chadwick on drums.

    Critical reception


    On Allmusic, Cub Koda wrote, "Shake! was probably the group's second best album and certainly the one that came the closest to representing their live act.... Lots of fun and fireworks on this one, the sound of a band at the top of their game."

    Track listing

  • "Shake For Me" (Willie Dixon) – 4:46
  • "My Starter Won't Start" (Lightnin' Hopkins) – 4:46
  • "Jim Jam" (Jim Schwall) – 2:22
  • "Louise, Louise Blues" (J. Mayo Williams) – 2:45
  • "Wouldn't Quit You" (Corky Siegel) – 2:07
  • "You Can't Run That Fast" (Schwall) – 3:00
  • "Think" (Siegel) – 2:36
  • "334-3599" (Schwall) – 2:31
  • "Rain Falling Down" (Schwall) – 2:37
  • "Get Away Man" (Siegel) – 3:08
  • "Yes I Love You" (Siegel) – 2:49
  • Personnel

    Shake (unit)

    A shake is an informal unit of time equal to 10 nanoseconds, or 10−8seconds. It has applications in nuclear physics, helping to conveniently express the timing of various events in a nuclear explosion. The typical time required for one step in the chain reaction (i.e. the typical time for each neutron to cause a fission event which releases more neutrons) is of order 1 shake, and the chain reaction is typically complete by 50 to 100 shakes.

    This is also applicable to circuits. Since signal progression in IC chips is very rapid, on the order of nanoseconds, a shake is good measure of how quickly a signal can progress through an IC.

    Like many nuclear units, it is derived from Top Secret operations of the Manhattan Project during World War II. The word comes from the expression "two shakes of a lamb's tail," which indicates a very short time interval. For nuclear-bomb designers, 10 nanoseconds was a convenient specific interval to connect to this term.

    It has been discussed at length that the oldest documented usage of the phrase "two shakes of a lamb's tail" can be found within the compiled works of Richard Harris Barham called The Ingoldsby Legends.

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