![]() I wanted to keep the quality, yet introduce the ease of reading the meta tags and cover art. I have not tried the ‘.flac’ file type yet, despite there being a hard core set of fans. ![]() I’ve tried many file types and my collection has consisted of ‘.wav’, ‘.aiff’ and ‘.mp3’. Debates rage on, but get what works for you. File Typeįirst things first, the file type. If it does, then that’s great and I hope it benefits you going forward. So whilst I’m going to share my method with you here, it’s down to you to understand if it works for you or not. The key with anything in life is to be flexible. Over the last five years I’ve been toying around with file structures, file types, playlists and different software, searching for the ultimate way to organize my music collection. The worst feeling whilst playing a set, is having only a few bars of a track left before you’ve even got something loaded up into the next deck. Knowing how your music is organized and where you can find it with ease, will make your job as a DJ much more joyful. Yet I feel it is the most crucial aspect to making sure that you flow as a DJ. ![]() In my experience I'd say that roughly 60% of the times the grids are okay, 30% of the times they need minor adjustments and 10% of the times are completely off (I play deep and tech house and techno, so it's all modern computer generated music with a steady bpm).Keeping your music files organized is actually the most difficult part of digital DJ’ing. One question: how do you find out how many milliseconds the grids are off? I don't see those details, and when I'm beatgridding I just run the metronome and correct if I can hear a mismatch between metronome and beats of the track. I don't want to defend rekordbox, it's the worst piece of software installed on my computer LOL but I just want to inject some optimism here :) I agree, beatgridding with rb is very poor compared with traktor, so I was thinking to do all my beatgridding in Traktor and move it to rb with rekordbuddy, but yesterday I discovered this article that shows that rekordbox is quite good at key detection and traktor is the worst at key detection: Leading to issue 4:Ĥ) if an existing track's BPM tag gets clobbered during XML bridge import, you either have to set it manually, or re-analyze the track (thus messing up the set beatgrid) It seems only analysis will fix that, and then the beatgrid is screwed up by the shoddy analysis. Even a tag reload does not reset the tag's BPM. However, for some unexplained reason, the BPM tags in the library are all wiped to zero, even though the beatgrid still knows the track BPM. BRAVO!!! This is exactly the way it should work! The XML I'm importing does not have tags present, so when the import is complete, the playlist tracks have no tags, leading me to issue 3:ģ) Rekordbox should not erase library tags if they are already present and there is no replacement in the XML.Īnd the next observation: With tag overwrite set, XML cues, loop points, and hotcues are overwritten in the library as expected, the beatgrid of the existing library remains unchanged. Normally I do this, because my goal is to import new cues and hotcue points specific for this playlist. Let's say you externally edit a playlist XML, If you import and the tracks are already in the library, you are prompted if you want to use overwrite the library tags with the ones in the playlist tracks. Here's another weird thing with 2.1.1: (will try these issues with 2.2.0 later today) This will cover 95% of tracks produced.Ģ) Fix the bridge XML import function to use the Inizio attribute in the imported XML to guide beat grid analysis rather than kill it. What happens? You guessed it: you recover your library and your grid is gone! Hey, no big deal, just re-analyze your tracks.well, now you're back to the messed up grid.ġ) Fix the analysis algorithm to scrub the track looking for the first cue and set that point as the Inizio. This is particularly amusing if you've corrected the beat grid and set the Inizio points and exported the library with the setting Bridge->Rekordbox XML->Export Grid Information->BPM Change Points. If you set up an xml where you import a track that sets the Inizio, the track comes in with a single red beat marker and the rest of the grid is missing. So, 2.1.1 has supposedly fixed the bug in XML import where you can import the beat grid info. Instead, if the grid is on, it doesn't make that the Inizio If the grid is off, it usually starts a half note off, with the Inizio being some random beat. ![]() I'm running 2.1.1 (and this is true for every version I've tried) and noticed the default analysis beat grid usually does not pick up the first beat.
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