Davis Day
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November 13, 2012 at 8:27 am in reply to: Name one good thing and one bad thing about your DJ headphones #31781
Davis Day
MemberSony MDR – NC60
Good:
Battery-powered Noise Cancelling
High Quality Construction
Some of the most comfortable headphones I have ever worn. I could sleep in them.
Bad:
Expensive (Got mine for free)
Plastic Construction
Short CordDavis Day
MemberThanks for the replies! I’ve been a little busy lately but when I get a chance I will try and upload something taking in advice you guys have given me.
Davis Day
Memberthanks for the reply,
i don’t have any real electro uploaded yet but i think im going to upload one in the future so stay tuned!
unfortunately can’t help you with the recording, I was using serato dj intro and recording from the line out with both master and cue playing in the headphonesDavis Day
MemberThank you for listening, I’m glad you enjoyed it and even happier that you wrote me all that!
I’ll definitely check out your stuff,
Once again thanks, its great to know people out there are listeningDavis Day
Memberwhat tom foolery
they should have trolled them and played 96 kbps dubstep remixes of the black eyed peas
July 8, 2012 at 8:16 pm in reply to: Quick Top40/Electro Mix w/ brand new Vestax Typhoon, Feedback PLZ #1007350Davis Day
MemberThanks man, appreciate the feedback and taking time out to listen to it. i’m definitely going to upload more in the future
Davis Day
Memberi felt that your track selection was really good, i.e. all the songs fit together
it was the right amount of interesting, drops breakdowns and buildups.
i dont really like mixes go straight back and forth between banging and boring, and yours was definitely not one of these.
that drop in the middle was heavy too, in a good wayDavis Day
Memberbrian brown, post: 23116, member: 2313 wrote: I taught my good lady to beat mix on my Vestax Spin (with Djay) over the weekend. She really enjoyed it and wants a controller for herself. I looked into the Mixtrack Pro but what has put me off getting it for her is the inability for Serato Intro to record. I know this has been well documented but I feel it’s a massive omission. When I started out on my Technics many, many moons ago, I used to wear out TDK tapes recording over and over again perfecting my mixing and listening to how records go together etc. I think it’s a must for anyone who wants to improve there Dj’ing, beatmachting skills. This helped me to understand if songs went together and it really helped me when I played out. Also recording and listening my sets when I played out again helped me improve. My partner may never play outside her house (but hey you never know) but its still crap she can’t record her mixes and let me hear them.
It’s a shame as it would’ve been perfect for her. I thought the Djay software on my macbook was a bit basic but it seems it not. I was thinking of upgrading to a Vestax VCI-380 but the price was a bit steep. The Reloop terminal mix 2 came to my attention and I was looking forward to its release (and Phil’s review) but alas this comes with Intro too. Looks like the Vestax Spin will be keeping my hands busy for some time to come.Well currently I am using Dj Intro (with a Vestax Typhoon, but I’m pretty sure it applies) and the way I record is using an RCA to phono converter cable. You can plug that into a line-in on your computer, and using the free program “Audacity,” you can record everything from that line-in. It may take some messing around, however, to make sure you have all the right sound cards and audio sources selected.
then you can go into your settings in serato dj intro, and there is an option for the balance between the master and cue volumes, (in other words, when you are cueing the software will also play the master in your headphones). If this seems confusing, try it out and it will make sense.
But with this setup, you will have everything needed to record.
recording software
headphone cueing
hearing the master output
Audacity is a great program, by the way. It can export your audio files to literally any format you can think of, from oggs vorbis to variable rate mp3.
I don’t condone this but if you screwed up the gains in recording you can always mess around later and get everything the same volume, or even apply effects post-recording -
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