Traktor S4 vs Denon DN-MC6000
Traktor S4 vs Denon DN-MC6000 Posted on: 04.01.2011 by Caron Burckhardt I am getting one of these I THINK since they seem to be the best controllers out there on the market, I was into taking the step to CDJ's but I seriously feel like that is just a step back in technology.I am really struggling and believeing about weather or not to be a CDJ or to use a controller. Please leave ANY kind of opinion in this matter, TS4 CDJ's or the Denon DN-MC6000. Maybe you know one that is even better. I am very used to the Traktor Pro software so I am kinda leaning towards TS4. I have to say that the Denon DN-MC6000 looks more professional. I really don't want to lose out on gigs if I have a controller, so therefore I am also into maybe just becoming a CDJ, it feels more professional, but really it's a lot easier with controllers. If only those friggin "sync buttons" could be removed I believe we'd all get along better and controllers wouldn't be considered as cheating. I really want to get something new and more professional than the controller I have right now. And all I believe about is which one to go with (or CDJ's) I found this controller test, http://www.digitaldjtips.com/2010/11...rs-guide-2011/and it pretty much confirms that the TS4 and the Denon are considered to be the "Big Shots" of controllers. | |
Monroe Vandeslunt 09.03.2012 |
Originally Posted by attila
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Dwayne Mateo 08.03.2012 | Here are two reasons I choose the Denon and I am very happy with it!!! 1. I picked the MC6000 over the S4 because the MC6000 is an actual analog mixer and if my computer fails I can immediately jump to alternative sources, CDJs, Turntables or Ipods if I want. On the S4 it's dead in the water without a functioning computer. A rebooting computer in the middle of a packed dance floor is the worst thing that can happen to you, especially if you're getting paid good money to be there. 2. I picked the MC6000 over the S4 because a large number of people experience audio drop outs and crackling on the S4 unless they spend days extensively modifying settings and disabling wifi. I tested the S4 running Traktor Pro 2 on my computer and it could not handle it at all, simply not useable. As a matter of fact my friend who loaned the S4 to me had a 2 year old laptop that could not handle the S4 sound card so he bought a NEW LAPTOP and even the fastest laptop he could get STILL has audio issues. My understanding is the NI audio drivers not being compatible with other drivers on the system. As I looked at what I'd needed to upgrade to something reliable I was believeing I'd need to buy a mac book pro for $1,300 to run the S4 without audio issues and greater reliability. I was wrong!!! And good thing because buying an expensive laptop isn't really in the budget. When I hooked up the Denon MC6000 and installed the Denon ASIO drivers I was blown away. The controller was working on my 6 year old PC laptop with perfect audio and midi control!!! I was not impressed with NI's audio card products based on my own experience and lots of others on the community s, especially considering my old Numark controller's sound card worked great with no audio issues. It's important to understand that my laptop is fully functioning with WIFI running and NO ISSUES! This is key at private parties because I can download requested songs I don't have. The Denon product was true plug and play, took less than 10 minutes to be mixing on Traktor. You can see my full list of reasons on my blog @ http://steverowin.blogspot.com/2012/...-denon-dn.html
Originally Posted by RobDeLarge
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Shira Callie 12.01.2011 |
Originally Posted by RobDeLarge
NAMM may bring some pretty cool stuff to the table, but I've thrown together a pretty solid offering that brings a smile to my face. The short order that will make you wish you could grow extra appendages: Behringer DDM4000 ($325) + APC20 ($136) or APC40 ($249-$299). Throw in any version of traktor and a set of midi cables / USB-MIDI adapter ($35 Guitar Center) and you're good. Excellent Choice: $496 +tax & Cables (DDM4000 - APC20 - MIDI/USB adapter) + Traktor LE (Free) Even Better: $629/$659 + ($Roll Your Own + tax & Cables) = DDM4000 - APC40 - MIDI/USB adapter ($Roll Your Own Traktor/TSP/TSP2) Guitar Center will price match $325 for the Behringer DDM4000 (search online retailers). I bought 2 of them. Seriously, if your believeing about the future, the Behringer DDM4000 will keep you in the loop for some time to come. (As a MIDI-Controller or External Mixer with a hell of alot of options) They may not hold up as well in mobile applications, but for home/careful use...you're more than ahead of the curve with the DDM4000. You also have many options for controllers (that is if you don't use your DDM4000 as a controller, which you can map it too). The price match for the APC20 right now at Guitar Center is $136 + tax. I bought two APC40's at $249 each, new in the box. These were price matched with an online retailer at $269. One weekend, within my 30 days of purchase, I noticed they had them marked in the store for $249. The initial price match with an online retailer $269, resulted in a second price match within the 30 day policy to the low price of $249. Score! Twice! Google your gear, go to the shopping tab at the top and then sort by lowest price. If you have more than one average online retailer competing....you have a good chance of getting the price match at guitar center. Print what you find to price match with and keep the url. I've had prices change online in the time it took me to get to the store. The printout saved me as they would not honor the price without that printed verification (to give to their manager). It works, I've done it twice. Guitar Center Coupons + Price Match? Don't expect to stack coupons on your price match, in this realm. I've tried every which way to Sunday to get coupons stacked on the massive amounts of gear I've bought recently. The only deal I was able to stack was from the $100 off $500 year end sale Guitar Center threw in at the last minute of 2010. (Thanks Coldfuzion, I wanted to respond with a thank you). So I've brought my old gear up to speed and learning new tricks. It's an exciting time and the Controllerist Community is amazingly vibrant and full of life. Good times ahead. Decisions: If I were to make a choice on gear today, and I have, I skipped the current CDJ's and dove straight into the controller interface and associated software. My opinion on trending and the pace in which the industry is moving... I estimate after two more years there will be a complete transition in the medium and format (i.e. CD's/Vinyl/etc). I base this firmly within the rate of adoption of Controllerism by the Industry and Community. Within two years, I believe the mainstream conversion will be complete. Controllerism FTW!! There is simply too many creative ways to manipulate your sound and the resulting waveforms are unrivaled. What's to come? Packed venues and the rapid growth of Epic Controllerist Communities that are steeped in creativity, millions deep. I can't wait to see what raging and creative fires Controllerism will bring. Seriously, I'm stoked. Formats die, but the beats are forever. The following is my time machine. Breaking me out of my carbonate and fast forwarding me well into the future. Behringer DDM4000 (x2) (retiring my old mixers and digging into midi-mixers) APC40 (x2) Buttons are sexy, knobs are....well....ask my girlfriend. Traktor Scratch Pro (the 1200's on crack) with Audio 8 DJ (x2) Redundancy is never a bad thing. Failover is my friend. Behringer DEQ2496 (x2) This will clean up that which shakes the house and thunders the next county. Behringer EP4000 Amps (x2) For the 12's & 15's (rumble and shake) Arkive (x6 + spare stylus) I'm an Oak with Vinyl roots. Must digitize. The old staples that will never leave me - I'll post pics when the studio is complete: Technics 1200s - Chrome Decks Vestax PDX-D3 Ortofon Concorde DJ S Cartridges Sold -Pioneer DJM-800, along with the original CDJ's years ago |
Caron Burckhardt 12.01.2011 |
Originally Posted by Kaek
Thanks for your post man |
Monroe Vandeslunt 09.03.2012 |
Originally Posted by attila
|
Ricki Markman 09.03.2012 | Honestly, even though the Denon has xyz features and a stronger body, I'd still get the s4 in a heartbeat. I messed around with the Denon yesterday for a little while and it's just so damn cramped, like they just took every inch of real estate and stuck a button there. NI's gear is cleaner, more intuitive and just all-around more functional for my purposes. Now if only NI would start making their gear out of metal... I mean, look at these things side by side, the mc looks like a panel off a space ship. |
Danae Dumler 09.03.2012 | ^^^ ouch, that chart really lays it out. I haven't felt the need to upgrade my VCI but if I ever did, I would lean toward the Denon for sure. The clincher for me is the fact that it works as a regular mixer too. Icing on the cake is the input matrix applied to a separate output; very nice if you find yourself in a situation where you want different sounds in different rooms - the main room you're playing in and you throw an ipod on to pipe different music into a chillout room or whatever. |
Terresa Ranganathan 09.03.2012 | There is a S4 vs MC6000 comparison here: http://www.denondjcommunity s.com/community /i...rb_v=viewtopic |
Dwayne Mateo 08.03.2012 | Here are two reasons I choose the Denon and I am very happy with it!!! 1. I picked the MC6000 over the S4 because the MC6000 is an actual analog mixer and if my computer fails I can immediately jump to alternative sources, CDJs, Turntables or Ipods if I want. On the S4 it's dead in the water without a functioning computer. A rebooting computer in the middle of a packed dance floor is the worst thing that can happen to you, especially if you're getting paid good money to be there. 2. I picked the MC6000 over the S4 because a large number of people experience audio drop outs and crackling on the S4 unless they spend days extensively modifying settings and disabling wifi. I tested the S4 running Traktor Pro 2 on my computer and it could not handle it at all, simply not useable. As a matter of fact my friend who loaned the S4 to me had a 2 year old laptop that could not handle the S4 sound card so he bought a NEW LAPTOP and even the fastest laptop he could get STILL has audio issues. My understanding is the NI audio drivers not being compatible with other drivers on the system. As I looked at what I'd needed to upgrade to something reliable I was believeing I'd need to buy a mac book pro for $1,300 to run the S4 without audio issues and greater reliability. I was wrong!!! And good thing because buying an expensive laptop isn't really in the budget. When I hooked up the Denon MC6000 and installed the Denon ASIO drivers I was blown away. The controller was working on my 6 year old PC laptop with perfect audio and midi control!!! I was not impressed with NI's audio card products based on my own experience and lots of others on the community s, especially considering my old Numark controller's sound card worked great with no audio issues. It's important to understand that my laptop is fully functioning with WIFI running and NO ISSUES! This is key at private parties because I can download requested songs I don't have. The Denon product was true plug and play, took less than 10 minutes to be mixing on Traktor. You can see my full list of reasons on my blog @ http://steverowin.blogspot.com/2012/...-denon-dn.html
Originally Posted by RobDeLarge
|
Shira Callie 12.01.2011 |
Originally Posted by RobDeLarge
NAMM may bring some pretty cool stuff to the table, but I've thrown together a pretty solid offering that brings a smile to my face. The short order that will make you wish you could grow extra appendages: Behringer DDM4000 ($325) + APC20 ($136) or APC40 ($249-$299). Throw in any version of traktor and a set of midi cables / USB-MIDI adapter ($35 Guitar Center) and you're good. Excellent Choice: $496 +tax & Cables (DDM4000 - APC20 - MIDI/USB adapter) + Traktor LE (Free) Even Better: $629/$659 + ($Roll Your Own + tax & Cables) = DDM4000 - APC40 - MIDI/USB adapter ($Roll Your Own Traktor/TSP/TSP2) Guitar Center will price match $325 for the Behringer DDM4000 (search online retailers). I bought 2 of them. Seriously, if your believeing about the future, the Behringer DDM4000 will keep you in the loop for some time to come. (As a MIDI-Controller or External Mixer with a hell of alot of options) They may not hold up as well in mobile applications, but for home/careful use...you're more than ahead of the curve with the DDM4000. You also have many options for controllers (that is if you don't use your DDM4000 as a controller, which you can map it too). The price match for the APC20 right now at Guitar Center is $136 + tax. I bought two APC40's at $249 each, new in the box. These were price matched with an online retailer at $269. One weekend, within my 30 days of purchase, I noticed they had them marked in the store for $249. The initial price match with an online retailer $269, resulted in a second price match within the 30 day policy to the low price of $249. Score! Twice! Google your gear, go to the shopping tab at the top and then sort by lowest price. If you have more than one average online retailer competing....you have a good chance of getting the price match at guitar center. Print what you find to price match with and keep the url. I've had prices change online in the time it took me to get to the store. The printout saved me as they would not honor the price without that printed verification (to give to their manager). It works, I've done it twice. Guitar Center Coupons + Price Match? Don't expect to stack coupons on your price match, in this realm. I've tried every which way to Sunday to get coupons stacked on the massive amounts of gear I've bought recently. The only deal I was able to stack was from the $100 off $500 year end sale Guitar Center threw in at the last minute of 2010. (Thanks Coldfuzion, I wanted to respond with a thank you). So I've brought my old gear up to speed and learning new tricks. It's an exciting time and the Controllerist Community is amazingly vibrant and full of life. Good times ahead. Decisions: If I were to make a choice on gear today, and I have, I skipped the current CDJ's and dove straight into the controller interface and associated software. My opinion on trending and the pace in which the industry is moving... I estimate after two more years there will be a complete transition in the medium and format (i.e. CD's/Vinyl/etc). I base this firmly within the rate of adoption of Controllerism by the Industry and Community. Within two years, I believe the mainstream conversion will be complete. Controllerism FTW!! There is simply too many creative ways to manipulate your sound and the resulting waveforms are unrivaled. What's to come? Packed venues and the rapid growth of Epic Controllerist Communities that are steeped in creativity, millions deep. I can't wait to see what raging and creative fires Controllerism will bring. Seriously, I'm stoked. Formats die, but the beats are forever. The following is my time machine. Breaking me out of my carbonate and fast forwarding me well into the future. Behringer DDM4000 (x2) (retiring my old mixers and digging into midi-mixers) APC40 (x2) Buttons are sexy, knobs are....well....ask my girlfriend. Traktor Scratch Pro (the 1200's on crack) with Audio 8 DJ (x2) Redundancy is never a bad thing. Failover is my friend. Behringer DEQ2496 (x2) This will clean up that which shakes the house and thunders the next county. Behringer EP4000 Amps (x2) For the 12's & 15's (rumble and shake) Arkive (x6 + spare stylus) I'm an Oak with Vinyl roots. Must digitize. The old staples that will never leave me - I'll post pics when the studio is complete: Technics 1200s - Chrome Decks Vestax PDX-D3 Ortofon Concorde DJ S Cartridges Sold -Pioneer DJM-800, along with the original CDJ's years ago |
Caron Burckhardt 12.01.2011 | Thought PC was a myth now a days? |
Matha Obray 12.01.2011 | ^^U best have a mac cuz right now the sound card is giving problems with pc's |
Somer Vanstraten 12.01.2011 | I question for someone who use the s4, is really the sound quality not that good? I was believeing to sell the 100se arcade and go for the s4. |
Caron Burckhardt 12.01.2011 |
Originally Posted by Kaek
Thanks for your post man |
Monroe Vandeslunt 12.01.2011 | From what I can tell there isn't that much the MC6000 can't do vs the S4 Things like timecode control is not insurmountable... you just buy TSP add a seperate audio interface and route the audio through. The S4 software features is going to be a non-issue once the new Traktor Pro comes out as well. They both have FX layout, transport and loop control sections. The main thing missing I believe is that the S4 had the foresight to include sample controls, which the MC6000 obviously could not have developed for. I believe the biggest pluses for the MC6000 is that its a true mixer, it has loads more connectivity options which I felt was severely lacking on the S4. It would be great if DJTechtools could do a shoot out comparison. |
Caron Burckhardt 10.01.2011 | Loved the looks of this (DDJ-S1 CONTROLLER) but unfortunately I still don't believe anything beats the TS4. I'm still deciding between the VCI SE and the TS4, still having troubles deciding. Thanks for this link! |
Len Ladera 10.01.2011 | So as i predicted some new stuff. Look at the new Pioneer control. Wow Front Page of TT, http://www.djranking s.com/2011/01/1..._ddj-t1-ddj-s/ |
So Francis 09.01.2011 | wow that new Berhinger Mixer looks like it could rock the house... Guesses on price? |
Len Ladera 08.01.2011 | Cagey, "Out of curiosity, what is it that determines whether or not you can use timecode?" Genrally, you would lose a channel bringing in the timecode and then outputting the media output on the 'dumb' mixer. You want to hear the media file not the timecode, thus you need some type of mixer (timecode enable) that will allow a computer to manage both in/outs. Thus when timecode is detected it works like a send bus, from the timecode input, to software, software then behaves like a return bus prefader EQ/etc. |
Caron Burckhardt 08.01.2011 |
Originally Posted by l0rdr0ck
Any price yet? |
Talitha Duchsherer 08.01.2011 |
Originally Posted by l0rdr0ck
Out of curiosity, what is it that determines whether or not you can use timecode - is it the soundcard? If so, I could potentially replace my current mixer with the Denon but keep the Audio 8 for playing timecode vinyl. Then hopefully the Denon will get an update which will allow it to accept timecode, I can lose the Audio 8. Or have I got this all wrong? |
Len Ladera 08.01.2011 | Well Looks like it is starting.... All new Behringer http://www.behringer.com/EN/Products/NOX606.aspx |
Caron Burckhardt 07.01.2011 |
Originally Posted by l0rdr0ck
Anything special you are expecting from the NAMM's? |
Len Ladera 07.01.2011 | January 13th-16th. So like 1 week buddy |
Caron Burckhardt 07.01.2011 |
Originally Posted by HawZee
|
Caron Burckhardt 07.01.2011 |
Originally Posted by l0rdr0ck
|
Caron Burckhardt 07.01.2011 |
Originally Posted by TABS
|
Caron Burckhardt 07.01.2011 |
Originally Posted by djproben
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Len Ladera 07.01.2011 | Cagey, 1. Neither accepts timecode yet. NI will probably charge again for this feature since they license it from someone else. 2. The Denon can be a standalone mixer. "notable is the fact that the DN-MC6000 is a real mixer, able to process audio inputs for external devices without a connection to a computer, as a dedicated mixer unit would" from Denon's site. 3. The S4 cannot be an external mixer, "It can't be used as an external mixer. Only the master out and headphone output can be controlled with the master out and headphone output knobs, since those are real potentiometers. The rest of the controls are only HID/Midi." from NI community s 4. S4 software, note that the S4 software comes with the unit. You would have to buy Traktor Pro/Scratch Pro for the MC6000. I feel that extra hundred bucks is baked in. |
Irwin Ney 07.01.2011 |
Originally Posted by l0rdr0ck
I work at Brazil - S |
Talitha Duchsherer 07.01.2011 | Hi All, I am also trying to decide between these two controllers. I currently use a Vestax TR-1 with an Audio 8 DJ and Macbook Pro, plus I have an analogue mixer at home which I occasionally use to play vinyl (shock horror!) or timecode vinyl over 2 decks. I only use my laptop/midi setup out at gigs, for which the Vestax has served me really well, but I want to be able to control 4 decks without switching between volume faders, plus jog wheels and cue points, all of which both the Denon & S4 have. I am believeing that I can lose my analogue mixer and Audio 8 DJ and replace them with one of these units, but can they be powered and used as stand-alone mixers, or do they have to be powered and run via the laptop? Also, somebody mentioned that you can't use timecode vinyl on the Denon but you can on the S4 - can anyone explain why this is as I don't understand? I know the S4 has the loop players, but I don't know how much I would use these as I already have loops set up within tracks anyway and I don't believe it warrants an extra |
Len Ladera 06.01.2011 | Yeah i would probably buy the S4 instead of the Denon. |
Nedra Fresneda 06.01.2011 | HID sealed the deal for me |
Len Ladera 07.01.2011 | I also forgot the silly little Korg nanoKontrol. P.S. V-Hoff I am a Senior Systems Engineer, i run 5 seperate Oracle 11g RAC installations, lol. Do you work out of Redwood Shores? |
Irwin Ney 06.01.2011 | Man I loved your post, someday I will achieve what you did with your setup I'm really interested in tech stuff, complex systems and stuff.. Afterall I'm a Oracle Database Administrator Performance Tuning Specialist. I have pure love for the best setup ever, I work for it hehe. And when it comes to music and DJing I simple can't live with my setup right now: Dell Vostro 13010 (work laptop) + Windows XP SP3 + Traktor Pro + Numark DJIO + M-Audio Oxygen v2 + Korg nanoKontrol + Seinnheiser hd25-1 II The best part of it is my headphones |
Len Ladera 05.01.2011 | I would also recommend pursuing the external route. You will in the long run get more flexibility as your workflows change. V-Hoff's idea is intriquing. This is where my modality has gone to. I use External Traktor mixed through Ableton with a Hybrid/Midi mixer (a la SmartMixer), a Kontrol X1 and a Denon SC2000. I can apply effects from Traktor, from Ableton or from the Mixer. I use an Ipad using "LiveControl" + TouchOSC" http://liine.net/livecontrol/ and a Launchpad. The launchpad I use now with Ableton but I used to use the 4 deck TSI mapping before i got the SC2000, so i could do cue points. Avoiding a much more involved tech discussion. I KNOW firewire is superior to USB protocol. I can drive the latency down much further via firewire and accrue less CPU overhead. Some background on this "For isochronous devices like audio streams, the bandwidth is constant, and reserved exclusively for a given device. The bus bandwidth therefore only has an effect on the number of channels that can be sent at a time, not the "speed" or latency of the transmission." "A USB network relies on a single host at the top of the tree to control the network. In a FireWire network, any capable node can control the network." "These and other differences reflect the differing design goals of the two buses: USB was designed for simplicity and low cost, while FireWire was designed for high performance, particularly in time-sensitive applications such as audio and video." So why do i point this out, well since all my controllers (Launchpad, Kontrol X1, SC2000)are USB, my external harddrive is usb, a USB 2.0 audio interface on this bus would definately choke from my laptop. Since my audio is on a seperate interface i dont worry. The key to making this all work is actually the Korg Zero 4 mixer..... The Korg Zero 4 (I have not found anything to replace it and not lose something) I run it at 24/96 with 256 buffers. I acheieve a 2.5ms one direction. 5.0 ms total in/out from ableton. I have found that about 7 ms is enough for the human ear to hear a skew. So if i plan to run a plugin/automation heavy live set, i will bump the buffer to 512 that provided me with a 5.3 ms latency totally acceptable. I run it in either Audio/Midi or pure Midi Mode. Lately more Audio/Midi for the hybrid action, i find sometimes midi mixing controlls just a tick to slow for some tricks and flares. I then have taken the odd step of Aggregating the audio from the laptop jacks with the Korg Zero 4. I then take Jackosx and bind it to the new aggregate. This allows me to create a truly independant monitor that comes out the laptop's heaphone jack. I then take the virtual output of the System Device and route it into live. Thus i can sample Youtube or anything else coming off the mac without cables or losing channels on the physical interface. I can monitor every cue permutation from the laptop headphone (fulfilling the Smart Cueing concept from DJ TT articles on smartmixing). It also allows me to record traktor into an Ableton live clip. Since everything is passed thru ableton in my case i can at any time reroute and have any channel hit the mixer on any of the inputs 1/2 3/4 5/6 7/8, assign the crossfader on the mixertop and monitor from the mixertop. Since the Korg Zero 4 has a dedicted strip of midi controls for each channel in Audio/Midi mode i have real EQ on the left (white knobs) and 4 more black knobs (midi) per channel. PS did i mention timecode works for many vendors from this mixer. I have used Ms. Pinky and Torq, and we know it is Traktor certified. Anywayz i believe i just made myself crazy to all of you by describing this, Summary... I wanted to buy a S4 i decided no, I wanted to buy a MC6000 i decided no, I wanted to buy a Denon X1600 to replace my Korg, i decided no (i would lose to much and probably not be able to run my rig this way over USB 2.0) Where am I at now? I want to buy something, i guess i will just get an Innofader for my Korg. |
Vi Ramano 05.01.2011 | The main advantage of an S4 or MC6000 is that it is compact and portable and "all in one". As great as the DN-S3700s are, they are pretty big to lug around. It really depends on your style. Do you plan/do club DJ? Most clubs already have mixers and CDJs and many have audio interfaces these days. Another option is to go minimal with just a laptop, traktor, an audio interface like an Audio2DJ and a controller like the Denon DN-SC2000 and use the club mixer (analog mode). |
Vi Ramano 05.01.2011 | Also the Denon DN-x1600 mixer is really sweet. around $1000 and very comparable to the DB4. 4in/4out (stereo) audio interface. traktor scratch certified, on board effects processor, full midi surface with extra midi strip, can be used standalone or as midi surface or hybrid. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S-WFNsOTF6o http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mm-H1ce8rtU http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Va_3-Zt1OkA |
Irwin Ney 05.01.2011 | I would go to the external mixing route... Always use your club's mixer, bring an Audio Interface with 8 outs (4 stereo) if you play with 4 decks. Then you can use some other cheap and small midi controller to controll what you can't externally. Or you can follow my dream: My dream setup at home: Macbook Pro 13'' Traktor Pro 2x iPAD (for transport, effects and everything that the mixer don't do) M-Audio Firewire 610 DDM4000 (don't use MIDI, just analog setup, and don't use the DDM FXs, cheap and usefull) Good Average Studio Monitors (KRK Rockit maybe) Seinnheiser HD25-1 II Headphones My dream setup at club: Macbook Pro 13'' Traktor Pro 2x iPAD (for transport, effects and everything that the mixer don't do) M-Audio Firewire 610 Clubs mixer (or DJM, or A&H, or whatever they use) Seinnheiser HD25-1 II Headphones I believe this is the most profissional way a Digital DJ can perform with the full capabilities of the Traktor Pro (4 decks, 4 FXs). My 2 cents |
Ethyl Laface 05.01.2011 | I'm in the exact same position right now. I was going to get the S4 but looks like I'll wait until NAMM is over to see if it is getting some competition. |
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