Home 2023 Forums DJing Software Software for DJing oldies parties

Viewing 5 posts - 1 through 5 (of 5 total)
  • Author
    Posts
  • #2251401
    Michael Risola
    Participant

    I would look at Algoriddim Djay Pro. I believe the Pioneer WEGO3 comes with it.

    #2251431
    DJ Vintage
    Moderator

    Unfortunately you have picked the most difficult genres to beatmatch. Key matching is not a big deal, keys can be detected for older tracks also.

    Those older tracks are, especially til the mid-80s or so, predominantly hand drummed. SOME of the top 3/4 DJ software programs can handle this, it’s what’s called flexible beatgridding. Traktor for example can’t, Serato and Mixvibes Cross on the other hand are pretty good at it.

    That said, it will get the grids wrong way more than for more modern, computerized music.

    You can download a free time-limited version of Cross I believe. That would give you the opportunity to see if it does what you require. I’d use Mixed in Key for key detection, it’s by far the best software out there. Not cheap, but well worth it to get 96 out of 100 right (the next best software gets it right 76 out of 100).

    If you decide to buy Cross, it’s relatively cheap compared to competitors at 49,00 euro/dollar and, imho, more mature than DJ Pro.

    Hope that helps some

    #2251911
    Terry_42
    Keymaster

    I second Michaels opinion. I would get djay Pro from the Mac Appstore. It is relatively cheap and an excellent match for your controller. It has several auto detect systems, you can switch to parallel waveforms (which I would recommend) instead of the moving plates in the settings menu and the layout is very easy. You should find yourself right at home. Keymatching is quite easy, but you might consider getting MixedinKey to update to the camelot wheel, as djay only displays notes and hence without musical knowledge it is harder to match that.
    As for beatmatching, while djay does not have the flexible beatgrid of Serato it does a good job approximating unusual beats, so you should be good to go, but in that genre I would not worry too much about beatmatching as Vintage said. I would rather go for fade blend, 16 beat loop out or similar transitions.

    #2252431
    William Buttry
    Participant

    I dj for rock pop urban country contemporary gospel and stuff like that. Most of that stuff is key mixing from one song to another in the same key. slow fade Transitions get you a copy of the Camelot wheel and it will tell you what keys work good together like Dm and Am work real good together. Also you need to use songs together that fit like a soft song going out and hard rap does not fit together. And what ever software you get I would suggest mixing in key software also. virtual Dj if I remember correctly has the key to each song on the line with the name of the song. BPM do matter but not as much as key mixing I brought in songs that sounded good together 30 or 40 bpm difference they say do not go over 10 bpm difference but it depends on how the song starts out . If it start out balls to the walls yeah don’t go over 5 to 10 but if it starts mild and the sound wave is very flat looking then you can get away with it cause songs like that usely build to a climax.

    #2255681
    Larry Garland
    Participant

    Thanks for the feedback, guys! Looks like the first thing I’ll have to do is get a new Mac that can run OS X more current than Mountain Lion. Mine’s > 6 years old.

Viewing 5 posts - 1 through 5 (of 5 total)
  • The forum ‘DJing Software’ is closed to new topics and replies.