You can adjust all of the segments + the initial downbeat in the prepare screen. This is done based on the energy for that segment – so it looks for major phrasings and attempts to set a segment start point there. ![]() The interesting element is that instead of detecting energy levels on a per-track basis, the software actually splits up the track into segments – about 5 to 10 per track. ![]() While you can add tracks to the collection at any time, in order to do track analysis, you will need an internet connection as it communicates with Mixed In Key’s servers for energy and key detection. This section for the most part behaves like it would in any other DJ software- setting up playlists, analyzing tracks, and setting playback metadata on the tracks themselves. Here’s a closer look at each: PREPARE The Prepare screen (click to expand) ![]() The software is divided into three sections – prepare, play, and export – designed to follow the main times that a DJ uses the software. ![]() Announced earlier this week, the new Mixed In Key DJ software is set to go into a limited beta as early as today or Monday – but what makes the development of another DJ software unique or interesting? Read on for a first look (and a quick demo video) of how the software plans to stand out from the rest.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |