Mastermix Classic Cuts Volume 1 - 100 -complete... ❲10000+ VERIFIED❳
1. Dated Material Music moves fast. If you are a modern EDM or Top 40 DJ, the remixes in Vol 1–100 will be too old for your sets. These volumes are strictly "Old School" and "Classic." If you don't play 90s parties, school discos, or weddings, this set is useless to you.
2. The UK Bias Mastermix is a UK company. While they feature US hits, the selection often leans heavily on UK chart toppers, Eurodance, and novelty records that were massive in Britain but unknown in the US. If you are an American DJ, you might find 20% of the tracks unrecognizable to your crowd.
3. Vinyl/CD Rips Depending on where you are acquiring this "complete" set, be aware that early volumes (1–30) were originally released on Vinyl. If you are buying a digital collection, you need to ensure the rips are high quality (320kbps or FLAC). Low-quality rips of 90s vinyl sound terrible on modern club sound systems. Mastermix Classic Cuts volume 1 - 100 -complete...
4. Not for Passive Listening This is not a "Greatest Hits" compilation. You do not put this on for a road trip. You will hear intros dragging on for 16 bars, sudden cuts into samples, and tempo changes. It is functional music, not passive music.
Volume | Release year | Format | Representative tracks/medley | Catalog/license no. | Source ---|---:|---|---|---|--- 1 | (unknown) | CD | Medley A / Edit B | MMM-001 | Distributor 2 | (unknown) | CD | Medley C / Edit D | MMM-002 | Distributor ... | ... | ... | ... | ... | ... Volume | Release year | Format | Representative
The first 100 volumes are not random. Mastermind producers like Dave Lee and John Morement structured the series like a library. Here is how the majority of those 100 discs break down:
The Mastermix Classic Cuts series has been well-received by fans of classic hits. These compilations are great for: sudden cuts into samples
You might think, "Why not just stream these songs?" Here is why a DJ who owns the complete Mastermix Classic Cuts volumes 1-100 is sitting on a goldmine: