


- #SERATO DJ CONTROLLER HOW TO#
- #SERATO DJ CONTROLLER UPGRADE#
- #SERATO DJ CONTROLLER PRO#
- #SERATO DJ CONTROLLER SOFTWARE#
- #SERATO DJ CONTROLLER DOWNLOAD#
There is also a separate filter knob per channel, as you’d expect.
#SERATO DJ CONTROLLER PRO#
Top marks – it’s great to use and an accurate copy of what you’ll find on pro scratch/battle mixers.

More important than all that, you get fun effects paddles, for easy triggering on/off, both momentary and locked, of each effect engine in Serato. Demoing the paddle function, a feature that makes controlling effects more creative and fun. The only real compromise is a single effects level knob. You get two effects engines still, the ability to choose three effects per channel from the unit itself, and to alter the effect cycle value. More recently, effects control from hardware has been scaled back, but I think it’s gone too far in some entry-level devices. In the “old-style” controller layout, popular a few years back, there were two effects engines, each of which controlled three effects – lots of knobs and buttons, which many DJs eventually felt was overkill. Learn to DJ with Digital DJ Tips: The Complete DJ Course Effects

This being a “battle” emulation, the mixer is more than just a mixer, of course – it’s also where you’ll find the effect and performance pads, which we’ll look at next. The mixer section is spacious for a controller this size, though the performance pads will be too cramped for some. There is three-band EQ and “trim” (level) control here, too, and at the very top of the mixer, a rotary encoder and two “load” buttons for library navigation and track loading. But while the upfaders and crossfaders have space, this does mean the performance pads are small – more on those shortly. The mixer section is notable for its width – much bigger than usual for controllers this size, giving a spacious, well laid-out feel. Using the REV1 to switch between decks 1, 2, 3 and 4 in Serato DJ LiteĪt the top here is also where you’ll find the sync buttons, and the master volume (right-hand deck) and headphones volume (left-hand deck).
#SERATO DJ CONTROLLER SOFTWARE#
Even using the free, limited Serato DJ Lite software, you get control over four software decks this way. There are simple but effective looping buttons above the jogwheels, and here’s also where you’ll find buttons to switch to decks 3 and 4. They have no in-jog displays and of course they’re not motorised like the bigger-brother DDJ-REV7‘s are, but they’re an improvement on those of the DDJ-SB3, which this controller is basically a replacement for. the jogwheels are relatively large, and they feel good.
#SERATO DJ CONTROLLER UPGRADE#
The REV1 comes supplied with Serato DJ Lite, but users can upgrade to the Pro version – if they don’t mind the extra cost.Īs is the case with most software nowadays, Serato will work with your own music files, but can also work with streaming services so you can play from TIDAL, Beatport LINK, Beatsource LINK and SoundCloud Go+, too.
#SERATO DJ CONTROLLER DOWNLOAD#
To get going, you download the Serato DJ Lite software from Serato’s website, and plug the unit in to your computer – you then plug in headphones, a microphone if you want to use one, and powered speakers – you don’t even need to do that if you don’t want to, as it can play through your laptop if you wish.
#SERATO DJ CONTROLLER HOW TO#
Read this next: When To Upgrade Your Gear (And When To Wait) How to set up the DDJ-REV1 It works with Serato DJ Lite, but would also work with Serato DJ Pro if you already owned it, or upgraded to that software. It is only a controller – no Aux inputs or anything like that. So overall, we’ve got a battle layout… in an all-in-one DJ controller. Next, you notice that the mixer section is like a shrunken battle mixer – it has the same clean, simple lower third (for uncluttered access to the crossfader), then the performance pads above that, then the EQ controls laid out in the Pioneer DJ DJM-S7/S9 format. No DJ controller has ever done this before – and once you see it, you do wonder: Why not? It makes sense! Echoing the layout of battle turntables, the play/pause and cue buttons are featured bottom right, with a horizontal pitch fader at the top. The first thing you notice is that the “decks” are laid out with the play/pause button (and an honorary little “cue” button) bottom right, and the pitch sliders are horizontal at the top – just as if you turned two traditional turntables through 90 degrees as battle/scratch DJs tend to do. The DDJ-REV1 is an entry-level device, so it’s all plastic, but the build quality is fine – many pro DJs are happy to use these types of controllers as portable, secondary units, including our own tutor Jazzy Jeff ( see his demo mix on this very device here).
