I steer clear of Apple products, but I've still had a lot of fun in this space thanks to DJ Studio (https://dj.studio/), a desktop app that helps make offline (rather than real-time) mixes. I use it to make a monthly personal mixtape, which is a nice way to remember what I used to listen to. They call it a "DAW for DJs," which is accurate.
I especially admire the team that makes it. The CEO records demo videos that are so filled with enthusiasm and accessible expertise that you can't help but appreciate the product more each time you watch them, and the COO sends out email announcements that are actually useful and not spammy.
It's a niche product, but they fill that niche well.
I used to do offline mixes with a (partly generated) shell script that calls several sox instances to do the mixing/tempo change/volume adjustments. As a CLI person, I liked that approach, although I would be happy for something a little more streamlined. I wonder if anyone knows an offline mixing tool in the spirit of KISS, without a GUI? I guess Csound would be a better backend then sox, but I lack the fluency in Csound to do that...
https://mixxx.org for a FOSS (read: somewhat enshittification proof) alternative.
I think Mixxx is for live mixing only. Still a good piece of software though!
Not sure about that.
There is a feature request for supporting streaming services and the hurdle is legal more than anything. https://bugs.launchpad.net/mixxx/+bug/938180
That’s a bit orthogonal, though – you can use streaming services when playing live, too.
Yes, sorry, that 2nd part of the comment belonged in another thread here.
It’s not for live mixing only.
Can you point out the nonlinear/non-live features? https://mixxx.org/features/ doesn't do a good job of that.
It is? It has no timeline or automation. Mixx is Tractor alternative. DJ Studio is more like simplified DAW aimed at making mixes/prep for DJing.
I love mixxx, but I bet this apple music thing will never support open source dj software. They are too afraid of folks pirating the music.
I guess someone using mixxx is not streaming the music (like me) so yes these are different target 'markets'.
Interesting! This product looks to be the spiritual successor to MixMeister Fusion, another app that I used to use to make offline mixes back in the mid-late 2000’s.
The Apple Music integration in dj studio is currently completely nonfunctional for me on macOS. I get a listing of tracks in my library but I cannot use them even after downloading locally.
Looks interesting - only to see I have to convert my whole flac library
How do you know someone's into crossfit^H^H^H^H^H^H^H^H FLAC? :D
It works with FLAC; in fact, that's preferred, because you want to start with the best available quality.
TECHNICALLY flac is conceptually worse than wav. Flac truncates the 0 values in the PCM file, WAV preserves them. It's functionally the same, but wav reads the file while flac has to re-add the 0's then read the file, so there's technically one more processing step (which could go wrong).
That's kind of like saying storing files in a zip is worse than storing them uncompressed. Or like the "what color are your bits": https://ansuz.sooke.bc.ca/entry/23
Kind of, except anything that moves can not move, so the simple act of decompression can introduce errors that simply wont occur in the raw PCM-wrapped WAV file since nothing has been compressed at all (hence no extra moving part).
I really liked that linked article btw.
Could anyone comment on how its stems separation compares to VirtualDJ?
A genuine question about the software being discussed, no call for downvotes.
I didn't downvote, but your comment is fairly deep in a subthread about a different topic, so it's out of place.
"DJ.Studio supports many file formats from MP3, WAV, AIFF, FLAC and more."