Turns out, too, that the info you’re seeing (artist, etc) for each track is pulled right from iTunes’s database and not from the files’ ID3 tags. So assuming iTunes is a big part of your musical life, then, this is all good news. Why reinvent the wheel? But conversely, if you don’t use iTunes for organising your DJ music, I’d go as far as to say even at this stage that this probably isn’t the DJ software for you. Mac users, who generally have little or no resistance to using iTunes in their day to day lives, will feel this is how it should be – and I agree. Unlike most DJ software there’s no conscious/forced “importing” of tunes into djay Pro’s system to all intents and purposes, you’re just DJing with your iTunes library. Indeed, hit the little “expand library” button bottom right and the light/dark theme button next to it (to make the library area black-on-white), and it looks and feels like somebody’s just shoved a small DJing app over the top of your iTunes! Over other DJ software, iTunes integration is superior to all, bar none. Setting up audio interfaces is always a little bit of a head-scratcher for beginners (a bit like setting up printers on computers…), but it’s simple enough overall, and to be fair, the way it works in djay Pro is among the best of the lot. It was recognised immediately by the software, which auto-configured, so no worries there, but the audio didn’t auto-configure, and needed to be selected from a dropdown. Configuring the audio is done easily enough by a dropdown, but it would be good if it could happen automatically on plugging a compatible controller in. So I picked a modern controller that I know works well with djay on iOS (due to actually having been designed for it): The Reloop Beatpad. I’d actually played with the software without headphones or hardware at a party this weekend, but for the review I wanted to put it through its paces in a little more depth (it’s called “Pro”, after all!). On opening the software everything feels, actually, reassuring familiar to anyone who’s ever used djay on any platform: there are two very pretty if slightly kitsch Technics-style “turntables”, a few basic transport, looping and mixer controls, and a big, clean-looking lower section of the screen with the library in it. You buy it from the App Store, so it’s simple to get it downloaded and open on your Mac.
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