Bewertung f r Carrot Innovations - Virtual Turntables. DJ software, Jukebox software, MP3 Music Software for Pro DJ mixing in. Carrot Innovations Type:Software; Commercie l / Int. Websitecode: LG474836. I do not use these mp3 mixer software but I will link. I used to be a very keen amateur DJ using MP3. Virtual Turntables (VTT) is available. Not including the time I would just mix on Carrot Innovations Virtual Turntables software, my first hardware back in 2000 (just as I graduated high school) and was a pair of American DJ Pro DJ1 and some cheap Numark mixer.
MP3 Nugget: Scratch CDs-in a good way The folks down at Guitar Center tell me that if their sales are any indication, the era of the guitar is over and the age of the DJ is well underway. How else do you explain the fact that DJ equipment flies off the shelves while guitar sales decline? I just found a great program that lets you DJ any of your CDs, using your computer's CD-ROM drive(s): Ots CD Scratch 1200. Like all other MP3 Nugget applications, it's free to use, although I can imagine that people would gladly hand over $10 for something as cool as this.
Just drop a CD into your drive, let the installed software figure out what's on the CD, and it suddenly starts playing as a record spins on your screen. Use your mouse to scratch realistically, change tempo and pitch independently, and even mix two tracks together, using the controls to beat-match the audio. Download this app and kiss the next 15 minutes good-bye-you're going to be hooked. What is CD Scratch? CD Scratch is a FREE, funky and incredibly fun 'Virtual Turntables CD Player' performing the seemingly impossible.
Play two songs from the same CD at the same time - one forwards and one in reverse! Scratch a CD track back and forth like a record, or listen to your favorite CD automatically mixed between the turntables. DJ your next party like a pro, or enjoy the optional warm vinyl-crackle ambience on your latest CD.
Perfect for music lovers and aspiring DJs, CD Scratch is the ultimate CD player for any Windows machine and is less than 1Mb to download FREE for life! (No spyware, no banner ads). 'CDScratch is awesome!!! It is very rare, no, unheard of that a FREE piece of software is this fantastic!
I hope you guys are very proud of yourselves. Keep up the great work! PS: I have had a song with backwards lyrics that has been bugging me for years. Now I know what it says.' - Sam Laturi, Milwaukee, WI USA 'This is the app that I was looking for years. Ed, Valencia, Spain 'Thank you for the wonderful DJ player system.'
- Peter Schulze, Burlington, Ontario, Canada 'FOR A LONG TIME I BEEN LOKING FOR THIS KIND OF MASTERPIECE, IT'S REALLY COOL AND EASY TO USE!' - Charlie Lopez, San Juan, Puerto Rico. The CDScratch.com website is operated by Ots7 Inc, a Delaware corporation, under license by Ots Corporation Ltd, company no. 6659447, an England & Wales company. The vendor of products offered for sale on this site is Ots7 Ltd, company no. 9732721, an England & Wales company, VAT registration no. Registered offices: Ots Corporation Ltd, Suite 48, 88-90 Hatton Garden, London, EC1N 8PN, United Kingdom Ots7 Ltd, 5 Harbour Exchange Square, 2nd Floor, London, E14 9GE, United Kingdom Ots7 Inc, 1201 Orange Street, Suite 600, Wilmington DE 19801, United States.
There are several programs out there that emulate a Denon dual CD player and a battleboard. The best that I've found is Virtual Turntables by Carrot Software (www.carrot.com?), it won't let you send to different outputs on same card, but you can send a monitor output to a second sound card, which doesn't need to be very expensive since you'll only be plugging headphones into it. VTT will do +-15% pitch, nudge, loops, etc. (gawd I sound like a commercial). There are also a few other progs out there, try searching google. Write a perlscript to handle the playlist, then you could start one mpg123 to /dev/dsp1 (or whatever it calls it) so you could prelisten before you start playing. Although, if you are trying to sync things up so they play into eachother nicely, it may be more difficult.
![Downloads Downloads](http://www.otsturntables.com/assets/gfx/otsturntables/scnshot-otstt-full.jpg)
But I am sure there are ways of starting part way into a song and getting the timing. Actually, when you kill mpg123, it says how many seconds it played. Therefore, you could get that with a bit of regex, as long as you could start the song on that second.
Unfortunetly, you would only get a resolution of 1 beat per second, which isn't fine enough (considering house is generally played at 2 beats per second, and most electronica stuff just goes up from there.) Then again, the source is there: do with it what you like. WinAmp has an autocrossfade plugin, look for it on their webpage under Effect plugins, I believe. Works great for rap/rock, but crossfading techno gets kinda yucky as it doesn't beatmatch. Use that in conjuction with Pitchfork, also for Winamp, and you can do some pretty nice DJing. I personally use 2 turntables (Technic 1200's, of course) running into a Gemini mixer, with my laptop also running into my mixer. So I have the versatility of turntables for techno, and still am able to play popular rap/rock shit if requested.