Announced last week and now in private beta, Mixed In Key’s DJ software (“Danceability” appears to be the working name, but they’re also running a suggestions box for the finished title) promises to bring some of Mixed In Key’s existing technologies, plus a healthy dose of new thinking, to the DJ software arena. We’ve spent a weekend playing with it, and today can give you some first thoughts. It’s not ready for a full review so we’ll save that till the public 1.0 is out, so treat this as a first reaction and summary of its potential rather than an appraisal.
First thing to note is how small this program is! At 11MB it downloads and opens in a flash; a welcome change from the size and complexity of some other DJ software. I had it going in approximately 20 seconds from clicking the download link. Mixed In Key software is always slick and simple looking, and this is initially no different, with a three-icon page simply stating “prepare”, “play” and “export” on big buttons. The colour scheme in dark blue/grey is definitely familiar (think Traktor). Hitting “prepare” takes you into the first screen…
1. Prepare
You can think of the preparation screen as the software’s equivalent to Serato’s offline editor: A place to analyse and organise your music pre-DJ set. It takes on more importance in the software due to the way the software handles mixing.
Preparing each tune
Luckily, it’s pretty easy to get the hang of. Firstly you’re going to want to “beatgrid” each tune. You’ll mark the downbeat (the first beat of the first bar, normally) which can be done with a small yellow marker on an easily zoomed in/out waveform. Next, you can define sections of the tune. the software has a guess at some of these for you, so on very simple EDM tune that follows a set pattern, you may not need or want to change anything at all.
These sections have also been pre-analysed for you for energy level and key (I am presuming that like Mixed In Key software, this software is capable of spotting key changes in a single track, but I haven’t checked this), so you can see the more energetic / more laid back sections of your tracks instantly. You can alter these sections to make them more meaningful for you very easily.
The beatgridding (for that’s in effect what this is) in the prepare area has the potential to develop into something really powerful here, because this approach definitely has legs; marking sections of tunes makes sense, and is a good substitute for cues (as we’ll see in the next section), plus the software has succeeded in making the whole process feel considerably less intimidating. It forces you to think about song structure in a natural way, which is a good thing.
I’d definitely like to see elastic beatgridding here (the ability to drop multiple downmarkers to pull tracks that have a naturally varying BPM into line, such as Serato and Ableton have); it’s something that would take behind the scenes work for sure, but which could work really nicely in the context of this “beatgridding lite” approach to getting the job done, and which would open this approach up to a whole lot more than just electronic dance music.
A quick tick of the “Mark this song as Personalised” button shows you’ve personally checked each track, which is a nice touch.
Preparing your set
The other job you’ll do here is sort your music out into playlists. This is beta software, and there’s a whole swathe of things missing that I’d like to see: Proper iTunes integration (full structure not just individual playlists); editing ID3 tags within the program; control over what columns are showing, and the order they’re in, to name a few. But it’s wrong to highlight this stuff too much in a pre-1.0 version.
What’s already good about this section is that is has the aforementioned key and energy analysis built-in; like Mixed in Key, you just set it loose on your collection or playlist and it’ll analyse your tunes one by one, reporting this info and also taking a guess at the beatgrid stuff mentioned above. The artwork for each track is displayed Traktor-style, and clicking on it shows you the whole cover for each track.
The software also highlights when it believes a tune’s sonic qualities could be improved, and you can click through to Platinum Notes if you own it (it’s another Mixed In Key program) which can do this for you. Would be nice to be able to turn this column/button off, for those who don’t own that program.
2. Play
Again, beta software: No gains, no FX/filters, no loops even; the latter are coming in 1.0 but no word on the rest (personally filters would, I think, be enough for a “cut down” DJ program; frankly it’s the only effect I regularly use save maybe a little delay every now and then). What you do get is an instantly intuitive screen with two decks, each containing two waveforms; the “full track” waveform from the prepare screen, and a smaller zoom-in on the currently playing part. The interesting thing here is that with the tracks synced (there is an on/off sync button for each deck) and the play button behaviour set in the settings to what is effectively quantise behaviour, this software behaves in a way that will be instantly recognisable to anyone who’s used Traktor DJ on the iPad or iPhone.
Smooth, simple to understand scrolling? Check. Dynamic playlist that takes into account key and tempo (and in this case energy level) to give you some suggestions for a good next tune to play? Check. Grid-based playback, with no nudge or individual BPM settings (there’s only a master BPM)? Check.
We love the way this approach simplifies the technical stuff and lets you think about the tunes you want to play. But unlike Traktor DJ, when you combine this stripped-back simplicity with the section-based method of analysing your tunes, you can go even further, because the software lets you go further than just easily jumping between sections of the same tune without dropping a beat; it lets you mix whichever sections you like from one tune over the next one too, just by clicking on them.
It actually sound more complex than it is; the bottom line is that if you’ve spent just a few seconds marking meaningful sections of your tunes in the prepare window, you can have great fun performing decent-sounding mixes with minimal effort once you reach the “play” area. I can see this appealing massively to the home DJ, the party DJ and the part-time dabbler, as well as the mixtape-making music fan who wants good sounding results fast. Indeed, as an ideas board and an early planning program for mixes and sets, in this respect it will definitely appeal to professionals too.
I don’t know if you’ve ever turned on the automix facility in pretty much any DJ software that has it, but “results may vary” is the kindest description I can think of. With this software, though, this built-in “semi automix” nethod promises to do a far more credible job, especially as you can tweak various parameters. Of course there are those who put down the ides of automating what they feel should be done manually, but intelligent automix based on your well planned and properly prepared tracks sounds really cool to me – and as always, it’ll be what comes out of the speakers that ultimately wins out.
Like Traktor DJ, which I love, I found performing on this to be great fun, and while Mixed in Key’s software lacks some of the innovative touches of Traktor DJ (particularly, I love the slicer and the X/Y pads/locks on that software), in the case of Mixed In Key’s software, the track sections idea is very much its own innovation.
3. Export
I love this section. We always say you should record everything you do, always, and this software indeed has a setting that does just that. Turn it on, and every time you mix, you record, and then when you come to “export”, you’re going to find a whole heap of goodies. So clearly it’ll show you all your sets, nicely recorded. But also it shows you the tracklists of those sets. You can export those tracklists as CSVs. In time, imagine if Mixed In Key integrated auto-upload to services like Mixcloud, along with all the track markers in place and tracklisting auto-filled in? How much time would that save you?
More. It has a “My Top 100” section, that shows you your big tunes for last week, last month, last six months (let’s have an “all time” as well, boys…). Like last.fm’s “most played” section, this can show you valuable insights into your true likes. It would be great if it could also let you “time machine” back (“what were my favourite tunes this time last year?”) and also great if it could auto-store this info for safekeeping in the cloud.
Dedicating a section to what happens post-mix is smart, and I can only imagine that over time, lots more ideas will work there way in here to make the busy DJ’s life easier.
Conclusion
Mixed In Key has thought about how the software might integrate with your current set-up, and promises the software will work with all major controllers on launch. (I wonder whether, as with Traktor DJ and the new Kontrol S2/S4, that means things like manual nudging of tunes will be possible?) However, I think it’s fair to say that if you’re a “power” DJ, with a set-up comprising lots of modular devices, DVS, external mixer and so on, this isn’t aimed at you (DVS isn’t a feature, the internal mixer is your only option right now too, although of course pre-cue is available for headphone/master connection).
The software is also clearly a beta; while I found it stable, I did miss looping (as I say, promised for v1.0), but also I presumed the lack of “gain” controls on the rudimentary mixer meant that some kind of auto gain would have kicked in to level the max volumes of my tunes in the mix; it sounds like this is not so. This means that unless you use Mixed in Key’s Platinum Notes or some other program to level the volumes of your tunes, you have no way of altering how loud an incoming tune will be with its fader wide open. As mentioned, the program does integrate Platinum Notes insofar as it recommends when a song can be “improved”, but good autogain or a manual gain is nonetheless an essential I feel.
Also, while the beatgridding section is good, it does need elastic beatgridding so it just “works” with more of the wide world of music, not just electronic music; like in Traktor DJ (for which this is also a criticism), once programs start relying more heavily on locked in BPM, quantise and grids, this becomes more essential.
Overall, though, I think that Mixed in Key’s new DJ software is at a very minimum a decent step forward for software DJing. Depending on the price, how well it integrates with existing hardware, and which of the missing “essentials” appear in the release version (plus how well they’re implemented), it ought to do well, not by making existing DJs necessarily “switch”, but by carving its own niche.
I can hear now the howlings of the old school crying “sacrilege!”, but let them howl; despite their protests (I can hear them now: “this is automating DJing!”, “it’s letting anyone do it!”, “it’s taking the skill out of it!”, “It was great in ’88…” bleat bleat bleat), they’re missing the point; it’s not aimed at them, and there’s room for everyone out there.
If Mixed In Key takes the time to write some good, accessible documentation that is bold enough to strip away a lot of the supposed complexities of what it takes to be a DJ, and that concentrates on teaching the absolute essentials that this software requires of the user, this software has the potential to expand the reach of DJing as a hobby to yet more music fans. Just add a great music collection and a love of the dancefloor and you’re ready to rock.
But even this is selling the program short, as it’s going to appeal to more than just beginners or dabblers. It simplifies beatgridding while recognising its importance; attempts to help DJs shortcut understanding their music by providing algorithmic energy levels, key analysis and song sectioning; cleverly suggests great tunes to mix into; and even has a convincing automix engine for capitalising on all of this goodness. Anyone who’s DJed with any DJ software can find something to like here, I feel, just like nearly all the DJs I have spoken to about Traktor DJ loved that program instantly.
Imagine if Mixed in Key got a hardware manufacturer interested, and built a decent beginner controller that perfectly complemented this software. Things could at that point get really interesting…
We look forward to the full release, and further developments.
Video overview
Did you get a chance to watch the video and read through our thoughts? What do you think? Is there room for this kind of “semi-automated” approach to DJing? What do you think of the section jumping idea? Please share your thoughts in the comments.