Denon DJ has announced a new four-channel standalone DJ
unit called the Prime 4. It’s the first standalone unit with the ability
to play four decks of tracks using only two platters, which is
something DJs have wanted for some time.
This not only makes the Prime 4 unique, but it hammers home that Denon
DJ is sniping at Pioneer DJ’s stranglehold on the DJ tech market.
Pioneer DJ’s equipment has long been the uncontested
standard used by the industry. It’s requested by most DJs, which means
many clubs, audio rental companies, festivals, and more can justify
buying the pricey Pioneer DJ gear. In 2017, Denon DJ introduced the Prime series with a CDJ
that looked to reclaim a chunk of the pro market. Among its performance
features, there was a big hook: dual-deck playback, which allowed each
deck to have two layers that can be toggled between and played
simultaneously, giving you essentially four decks in two.
The new Prime 4, meant more for a home setup or mobile
gigs, is a shot at Pioneer DJ’s comparable XDJ-RR and XDJ-RX2 all-in-one
units. The Prime 4 builds upon the tech Denon DJ developed for the
Prime SC5000 CDJ, but it does it in an all-in-one format instead of
separate CDJs and a mixer. Notably, the Prime 4 includes the same
dual-deck playback. The Prime 4’s jog wheels are six-inches, metal, and
boast center HD displays with customizable RGB light rings. There’s also
the recognizable eight performance pads below each deck with options
for hot cues, loop and autoloop, roll, and slicer and slicer loop.
There are some other firsts for a standalone player. The
Prime 4 has an option that combines time-stretch (changing the speed or
duration of audio without affecting pitch), with real-time musical pitch
shifting, so you can match song keys with just a tap.
Another (niche) first with the Prime 4 is the independent
Zone Output for DJs to send a separate playlist of tunes to a different
room or location while performing. Either deck number four or the
master signal can be assigned to this separate zone via a dedicated XLR
output, with its own gain and EQ control. Mobile event DJs will probably
see the most use out of this, giving them, say, the ability to play in
one room and also provide alternate music for a different, chill-out
room.
It’s hard to ignore the Prime 4’s massive tilt screen.
Clocking in at 10 inches (three inches larger than the Prime SC5000
CDJ), it’s a lot of real estate. The cost is that the screen awkwardly
protrudes out from the back of the unit when folded flat. But it’s easy
to argue why the extra space is needed. Displaying four waveforms, plus
library navigation and a pop-up keyboard for finding tracks and more
would be nightmarish on a smaller screen. Like Denon DJ’s Prime SC5000
CDJ, this is a multitouch display that allows for swipes, taps, pinch to
zoom, and other gestures for navigation and control.
As far as inputs, there are two dedicated XLR inputs for
microphones with individual control, four USB slots (two on top, two on
the back), one SD media slot, and a 2.5-inch built-in SATA drive bay for
storing music directly in the unit. While playing, a DJ’s set can be
recorded live to any of these input sources.
Above each platter is a bay for selecting audio effects
with three knobs for quick-access adjustments: a parameter (like
panning), frequency, and wet / dry or beat timing. Separately, there are
four popular effects hard assigned to buttons in the center: filter,
echo, wash, and noise. For those who want control over visuals, the
Prime 4 also works with StagelinQ, Denon DJ’s lighting and video
protocol.
Other things to note about the Prime 4: there’s USB
keyboard support for music search so you don’t have to rely on the
on-screen keyboard, it supports uncompressed audio formats (FLAC, ALAC,
WAV), and support for Serato DJ Pro control is coming soon. It should
also be able to read and import your existing playlists, folders, hot
cues and loop information from iTunes, Serato DJ Pro, Native Instruments
Traktor Pro, and Rekordbox into Denon’s Engine Prime music management
software.
Ever since Denon DJ introduced its Prime series in 2017,
it’s felt like the company is taking a direct swing at Pioneer DJ’s
monopoly both in nightclubs and as a favorite among most performing
artists, proffering what it says is a better option. That’s only
reinforced by a recent video Denon DJ released with its sponsored
artists rocking Prime gear at festivals, capped with the hashtag
“#ChangeYourRider.” If enough DJs start putting Denon DJ Prime gear on
their riders (a part of the contract that outlines requirements for
things like hospitality and equipment needs), the hope is that more
vendors will buy the gear to have it on hand, and Denon DJ can
eventually take away some of Pioneer DJ’s grasp in this circuit.
It’s been under two years since Denon DJ launched the
Prime series, and it’s been able to snag a couple of flagship brand
ambassadors during that time, including Laidback Luke, Oliver Heldens,
Paul Oakenfold, and Tiësto. It’s a tiny pool to start with, and not
everyone stuck with the gear. Tiësto went back to Pioneer after his brand ambassadorship period ended.
The Article was Published on : TheVerge
Denon DJ’s new four-channel standalone unit shows commitment to battling Pioneer DJ
Reviewed by svsathya
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Reviewed by svsathya
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