The big difference for me is not having a nice, readable wave form to look at, not having something that tells you the BPM of the track, etc. So, it forces you to know your music much better IMO. And I'm STILL too lazy in this regard. Oh, and the sound is definitely different from vinyl vs. DVS.
But, I do both - straight vinyl and DVS or some combo. IMO, having turntables really gives you the best of both worlds option-wise. What you choose is entirely up to you.
2 x Technics 1210 MKII, Pioneer-DJM 900 Nexus, Traktor Scratch Pro, NI F1,
Ableton Live 9.6 Suite, Ableton Push, Studio One 3, Moog Sub37, Roland Alpha Juno 2, Korg MS-20 Mini, Yamaha TG-77, TR-8, Rhodes MKI Stage, Wurlitzer 200a, couple pedals, couple amps, lots of software and a freakin iPad
this right here is why my preference would be a straight vinyl setup it requires you to be more raw and in tune with your music..... if I was a full time dj and self employed at home I would 100% have a full vinyl setup as it would afford me time to know it and time for family still....
I don't want a laptop tucked in a corner that isn't the same thing I already do that with my controller now... I absolutely hate having a laptop in front of me.. it is bad enough its off to the side... honestly my compromise would be something like the xdj-rx or even the numark nv... that is my preference but even the nv requires a laptop and I really miss not requiring a laptop to dj...... I miss being able to have my monitors off and put my ear next to the needle and close my eyes and ride the groove...... something you cant do with dvs...
anyhow I screenshot some examples for out buddy here showing 64bars on a waveform and how its really is mathematic once you find your audiable cues which are at 32
Untitled 2.jpgUntitled.jpg
I don't know why its shrinking down the images sorry?
|
Bookmarks