Entries Tagged as 'Tech'

Traktor DJing with a Nintendo Wii Bluetooth Wireless Controller

 My good mate Tony came over a few weeks back with his Traktor set up – the usual laptop with midi Controller (Vestax from memory). Traktor with up to 4 digital decks/channels with the Pro version, auto beatmatching, EFX and your entire music collection nicely ordered at your fingertips looks like it opens up a whole load of possibilities.

Tony added another (geeky) twist to the standard set up by incorporating his Nintendo Wii controller and using it to wirelessly control the depth and saturation of EFX – watch this short video to see him in action – note the white thing in his hand is the Wii controller and listen to the track as he moves it up and down and presses midi mapped buttons  - too geeky for club DJing but still rather amusing !

 

 

classic!

Download a fully featured trial version (it just stops after 30 mins) of Traktor Pro from Native Instruments here. I will post the article about how to set up the bluetooth Wii controller integration in the next week or so.

Just ordinary basic principles… Alex Rosner on Sound

Great interview with one of the early club sound system pioneers Alex Rosner…

Paul van Dyk’s PVD iPhone DJ app

Spotted another iPhone DJ application recently – this time by trance DJ Paul van Dyk.

More of a DJ tool kit with a number of discrete applications than a standard single iPhone app this one will check frequency sound levels, vibration on your turntables (seismic reader), has a noise level/distortion meter, a BPM calculator, plus has a few fun things (digital glowstick anyone?) thrown in.

Check out the video here:

‘DJ Hero’ game controller first look

DJ Hero is something that has had a lot of murmurs about for a while. It will feature “diverse music genres including hip-hop, R&B, Motown, electronica and dance” and will include the turntable controller – image posted below.

 

The title “transforms players into DJs who rule the club scene by creating original mixes of popular songs and music from the world’s most exciting artists and DJs.” Will we see superstar DJ branded editions/updates coming out in a similar vein to Guitar Hero as well? Paul Oakenfold trance edition? Grandmaster Flash scratch edition?

Cheap plastic toy or hours of fun for the aspiring bedroom banger in us all? Time will tell…

Keep checking their website for release dates: http://www.djhero.com

Stream you home music collection to any web based PC

WOW!

I just had to write about this one after spotting a link that describes a new streaming media capability of Windows 7 (Microsoft’s latest operating system) slated for release in the very near future (May 5th?).

For those of you out there that have a great home music collection and would love to access it on the move Vs storing multiple instances of your collection on home/work pc, work laptop and portable mp3 player Microsoft Windows 7 looks like it provides the answer. Aside from the vastly reduced storage implications having one master set of music that is now accessible anywhere on the web with no doubling up/extra copies- result!

Going over to a mate’s place who hasn’t got a decent music collection? Want to show off that latest track you have created to an A&R man in his office? Want to provide the ultimate Barry White soundtrack to that special meal over at a date’s place? Need that perfect track to match that perfect sunset?

Windows 7 looks like it has the answer with the new Media Player streaming feature that allows you to stream your collection to any internet based device. It uses your Windows Live ID (eg your @hotmail email address) and requires you to sign in with that to establish the connection.

I’ve just installed Windows 7 so will post some screen shots shortly.

Ministry Of Sound iPhone Application

I don’t have an iPhone but spotted this on the Ministry site and had to mention it. Taking advantage of the iPhone’s touch screen technology Ministry have created a real time music mixing program where you can mix and edit in real time a trance track. Looks like it comes with some pre-canned very familiar sounding samples that you can introduce and tweak in perfect beat matched time…

Click here for more Ministry of Sound videos.

The great music technology debate

I regularly seem to encounter extremes of view on this and on reflection break it down into 2 areas: Medium and Delivery.

Medium (or format) is what the music is actually originally recorded on – be it vinyl, CD, DVD, or digital file (.mp3, .wav). Delivery is what you play it from – be it record turntables, CD decks, or laptop/computer driven.

You will have many schools of thought around each – that vinyl is truer to the artists original sound and sounds much better, that CDs are more flexible, that digital allows for so many possibilities etc.

After much thought around this I have come to the conclusion that it doesn’t really matter what medium or delivery method you use, each has their pluses and minuses, rather the choice of both is initially dependent on when you started getting into music. If you started collecting and playing with vinyl then that is going to be your preference, for me the main part was CDs so that is my chosen medium.

In saying that technology moves forward and in the last 5 years many vinyl purists have moved to CD DJing for convenience (it’s much easier to carry 500 CDs in your bag than 500 pieces of vinyl) and flexibility – what you can do on CDJs and an EFX unit is truly amazing – real time loops, hot cues etc.
There are also those that have moved to incorporate digital laptop DJing as well – again much easier to carry 10,000 .mp3s on a hard drive than it is to carry the same in vinyl in record bags. also if you lose the laptop or hard drive on the road you still retain a master copy of everything back at home base unlike vinyl that would often go missing in transit. With software like Ableton Live and the more DJ orientated Traktor you can create tunes on the fly from component parts and let the software beatmatch it for you allowing you to concentrate on the combination and track selection.

Arguably there is an element of risk at being left behind as things move forward if you don’t keep up with technological advances.  case in point a few years back I remember seeing Fatboy Slim play at Global Gathering. He played his typical vinyl set and had the crowd enjoying themselves but was immediately followed by Erick Morillo who on 3 CDJs and EFX units just killed it. There was no comparison between the two. Both were entertainers so had the performance element but in Erick’s case the techology really shone through. With advances on the digital front as well now will it in a few years be the same – if you are not playing on laptops will you be left behind?

There is one important element that is universal across medium and delivery methods and that is performance. In my view the DJ is an entertainer and so there has to be a level of performance and animation in what he/she is doing up the front of the crowd behind the decks. Arguably the punters aren’t going to know what he is playing on or from, from down on the dance floor but they will notice how he/she is playing it. Case in point – early adopters of Ableton when DJing straight from laptop would look like they were checking their emails Vs actually mixing tracks. I’ll never forget seeing Sasha do it early on and it really made an impact on the crowd – sure the music was OK but part of the experience is seeing the DJ get into it as well. Compare this with Nicky Siano (The Gallery, Studio 54 resident and 1st DJ to mix on 3 decks) who also made the switch to Ableton and absolutely goes off behind the decks bouncing around and tweaking knobs and having a great time of it all – thoroughly recommend you see Nicky if he ever comes to town a true performer!

PS As a CD man myself I love winding up a vinyl only DJs – best way is to just mention that there’s just no love/soul/feeling in the medium and that it just doesn’t compare to CDs for looks, sleeve art, taste, sound range etc! ;)

DanceMuse.net site moved!

After the final straw with my useless last provider (123reg don’t use them bad technical support) I have now moved this site to Justhost.com. These guys are very reasonably priced and so far so good – have things up and running. A few more design tweaks to go and we are there. Will post more later on…

Miami Winter Music Conference and International Dance Music Awards

For the dance music industry the Miami WMC marks the start of the dance music year. Tracks and new artists are introduced to the industry and punters alike over this week long event that has expanded in recent years to encompass many spin off parties, receptions, private villa bashes and parallel events. Recent years has seen the timing of the WMC coincide with the US’s Spring Break week – combined you can only begin to imagine the debauchery after a few Mohitos in the sun by the pool! Getting back to the topic at hand tracks are picked up here, played back in the UK and other underground clubs and then pushed/caned in Ibiza as/on white labels/cdrs. From here they are picked up and signed by more major labels and several months and an dance music events later (ADE, etc) start cutting across into the main stream. Phew! So what were the big standout tunes (if any?) this year? Watch this space as I hit up a few of the artists that were out there for their thoughts in the coming weeks.

 Every year as part of the WMC the Internatioanl Dance Music Awards (IDMAs) also are staged mid week by the pool of the resort hosting the conference. The full winners list can be found here at the WMC IDMA site but I will list a few highlights below:

Best Underground Dance Track – went to Home – Above & Beyond – Ultra Records – beating the other stiff competition of
Heater – Samim – Ministry of Sound, Anthem – Filo & Peri ft. Eric Lumiere – Ultra Records
Riff – Sander van Doorn – Ultra Records, Rise Up – Michael Procter – Mychan Records, and
Feels Like Home – Meck ft Dino – Yoshitoshi

Best House/Garage Track & Best Breaks/Electro Track – Love Is Gone – David Guetta and Chris Willis – Ultra Records

Best Progressive House/Trance Track – Let Go – Paul van Dyk – Mute

Best European DJ – Armin van Buuren beating Paul van Dyk, Tiesto, David Guetta, Ferry Corsten, Sander Kleinenberg

Best American DJ -  Gabriel & Dresden – beating the likes of Markus Schulz, Roger Sanchez, Christopher Lawrence, Danny Tenaglia and Deep Dish.

Best Global DJ   – Tiesto – beating Paul van Dyk, Armin van Buuren, Above and Beyond, Gabriel & Dresden, Carl Cox and Ferry Corsten.

Tiesto also won Best Full Length DJ Mix CD for In Search of Sunrise Vol. 6 – Tiesto – Nettwerk Records beating some tough competition with the likes of�
 A State of Trance 2007 – Armin van Buuren – Ultra Records, Anjunabeats Volume 5 – Above & Beyond – Ultra Records, In Between – Paul van Dyk – Mute and Mass Movement – Joe Bermudez – Nervous Records

Best Producer – Timbaland

Best Remixer – Robbie Rivera

Best Break-Through Artist (solo) – Sander van Doorn

Best Break-Through Artist (group) – Justice

Best Dance Artist (solo) – Bob Sinclar

Best Dance Artist (group) -  Daft Punk

Best Dance Artist (group) – Daft Punk
 beating  Above & Beyond, Chemical Brothers, Filo & Peri, Gabriel & Dresden, Freemasons, The Killers

Best Global Dance Record Label – Ministry of Sound edging out again stiff competition from

Black Hole Recordings (Tiesto’s label), Global Underground, Armada (Armin Van Buuren’s label) and the one and only Defected.

Best Global Club -  Amnesia Ibiza !

Pioneer totally cleaned up once again firmly establishing itself as the leader in digital DJ hardware picking up Best Manufacturer of the Year, Best Headphones – Pioneer HDJ-1000 (I must try em!), Best Mixer – Pioneer DJM800 (I want one!), Best CD Player – Pioneer CDJ-1000MK3 (must upgrade my MkIIs!), Best New Product of the Year – Pioneer CDJ 400.
Ableton Live 7.0 – Best Audio Editing Software of the Year & Best Audio DJ Software of the Year

finally Lifetime Achievement Award  posthumously went to Mel Cheren who died late last year. I was fortunate to interview Mel late early in 2007 and will post the interview to this site at a future date.

As I said the above are some of the highlights that caught my eye – complete list is online.

1st UK DJ to mix Live on national TV

Some great video has been made available on youtube of Greg Wilson mixing live on UK TV 25 years ago to the day. Footage features some bad 80’s looks and more importantly scratching and phasing on 2 turntables and a bit of Greg’s trademark reel to reel action originally shown on Channel 4’s ‘The Tube’ show 25th Feb 1983…

 

 

For more background on the clip check out the full story here

Greg’s sites are definitely worth a look as well:

www.electrofunkroots.co.uk
www.myspace.com/djgregwilson