More > Media Center 14 (Development Ended)
The DJ's Feature Request Thread
mojave:
I just tested something to see if it would work for recording crossfades. I used Tools > Advanced Tools > Record Sound. Under the Recorder Options, I set my recording device to "What You Hear." This is available depending on your soundcard drivers. I then recorded the last part of one song and the crossfade into the next. It worked great. If I wanted to do a whole CD, I would setup my playlist, start the recorder, play the playlist. When finished, I would make a Cue file with the actual track lengths of each song. Then I would use the Cue file to split up the files into tracks. I would then burn the CD (you might be able to burn from a Cue file, but I haven't tried it).
tunetyme:
I don't think it is required to have individual tracks on a CD. This is a situation where you are listening to the playlist and since every song is great with great transitions who would want to skip a track. It isn't about a list of songs but how it makes your audience feel and do as you play that sequence of songs.
As I see it for you and other DJ's, you could put together one of your great sets and be able to use it as a marketing tool. You could demonstrate different styles for different kinds of situations from a club to a wedding and everything in between. The CD is still the common denominator. Everybody has a player
keither:
If you don't care about tracking it out, why not use a diskwriter plugin (I know that Winamp has it, but haven't bothered to look at MC) and just play your setlist from start to finish? Then you'd have a .wav file you could burn (either from MC or Nero or whatever).
tunetyme:
--- Quote from: keither on May 21, 2009, 03:37:16 pm ---If you don't care about tracking it out, why not use a diskwriter plugin (I know that Winamp has it, but haven't bothered to look at MC) and just play your setlist from start to finish?
--- End quote ---
I'll check that out. Does anyone know if this can be done in MC?
keither:
--- Quote from: mojave on May 19, 2009, 11:12:02 am ---I just tested something to see if it would work for recording crossfades. I used Tools > Advanced Tools > Record Sound. Under the Recorder Options, I set my recording device to "What You Hear." This is available depending on your soundcard drivers. I then recorded the last part of one song and the crossfade into the next. It worked great. If I wanted to do a whole CD, I would setup my playlist, start the recorder, play the playlist. When finished, I would make a Cue file with the actual track lengths of each song. Then I would use the Cue file to split up the files into tracks. I would then burn the CD (you might be able to burn from a Cue file, but I haven't tried it).
--- End quote ---
This seems to be a likely option, Tunetyme.
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