When I have a chance I will post an example with before and after snippets, with a link to the underlying song. I am away from home right now, in Colombia 😁 to listen to cumbia, pig out on unhealthy, delicious food, and otherwise just chill. Your notes will be right there in the XML that you are already editing. Setting cue points is an easy way to do that, since it will tell exactly where they are, and you can comment them with what needs to be done. Gridmark it using the standard editor, and carefully note the spots where the ones try to get away from you.
If you want to play with this feature, pick a song that tends to slip or stuff beats. A good developer worth his/her salt should be able to create a standalone editor, although this is not ideal, unless Pioneer agrees to continue to support the current structure. It frustrates me to no end that such a powerful platform is hobbled by weak editing software. I don't understand why, instead of denying this feature's existence, Pioneer doesn't tout it, and upgrade their rather pathetic beat grid editor to something useful. Denon DJ Engine Prime may, through importing a Rekordbox library, but I have no way of knowing. And much, much more.Īs far as I know, no one else supports this feature. This is an incredibly powerful feature for anyone spinning many "world music" (how I hate that phrase) genres including Latin, Afro-beat, middle eastern, anything Asian. To do so, you will need to modify the rekordbox.xml file, and to do that, you will have to understand it's structure. You can, in fact, accommodate complex and changing time signatures in Rekordbox.