![]() ![]() ![]() They can do a great job if you want something basic and cheap that relates, in some way, to the tempo and intensity of the music you’re playing. At the simple end, there are visualization options, some of which we covered last year here. So a third-party, standalone solution is required. Unless Native Instruments brings out something of its own, a direct video plugin for Traktor seems very unlikely to appear. ![]() With that in mind, I started to investigate my options. Where there was no video for a track, I had a brace of visual loops to play alongside the audio.įor a multitude of reasons, I recently moved over to Traktor Scratch, and went back to spinning audio only, but sometimes I do get a yearning to bring a visual aspect back to my sets. Dropping a big new track while the video plays on a massive screen, or a clutch of flat screens, felt rather cool, especially as I was able to cut, mix, and blend the videos in exactly the same way as regular audio. I would spin h.264 video files in Scratch Live, playing back the visual aspect via Serato’s Video SL (now Serato Video) or Inklen’s Mi圎mergency plugins. Today we’ll show you how to get started with Mi圎mergency and Traktor.įor a long time (about four years) I was a video DJ-specifically, a DJ who played music videos. That doesn’t have to mean video-a blacked-out room with a solitary strobe provides as much of a visual statement as a 40-foot video wall-but a well crafted video and graphics show can be breathtaking if done well. Whatever style of music you play as a DJ, whatever kind of crowds you play to, visuals will always be a big part of the experience you present. ![]()
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