![]() ![]() It basically either displays a) the signal flow in concentric circles (each circle representing left and right audio) along with the vertical signal bar, b) the deck with the spinning yellow bar to indicate movement of the spinning deck, or c) just simply the vertical signal bar. It enables you to change what is displayed on the deck, in relation to time code set up and signal. The platter / scope section is pretty cool. I think it may be nice to have 3 full decks whilst running just one sample deck. One thing I noticed, which may be something Native Instruments may want to change down the line, is that if you have either of the 2 lower decks (C or D) set to be a sample deck in the ‘Deck Flavour”, then you are only able to set both decks C & D to small or micro. ![]() The deck layout has a couple of different options, one thing I discovered is that if you like to toggle between showing the advanced panel under the deck, then the only way this is possible, is if you have the layout set to ‘Advanced’ in the preferences. The two things I wanted to mention were the Deck Layout and Platter/Scope. There appears to be no mix level for the headphones on the internal mixer?! The other option may be to use the master tick on the master clock, which plays through the monitor channel and then play the track through the main output to align the beats.ĭeck Preferences, show a bunch of different options (click the picture to enlarge). Although at this stage, it is a very quiet tick and apart from turning the gain on the track way down and panning the track either left or right to hear the tick in the channel with no audio, I am yet to discover a way to control the level between music and tick whilst monitoring in the headphones. ![]() They have removed it from the top and placed this tick function in each deck. This is completely customizable and you can set any deck up as any type of deck.Īnother cool change is the beat tick addition to each deck. With the added option of using sample decks. The ‘Live’ option being very similar to the ‘Audio Through’ setting of TP1. The other main difference is the option of changing the deck type to either ‘Track’, ‘Sample’ or ‘Live’. DecksĪpart from the initial obvious GUI changes (it looks nice and is all different colours). Don’t worry too much about this though, as if you make any mistake you can change it within the preferences later down the road. TP2 then works through a set up wizard, allowing you to set up the system how you like it. It also appears that all tracks need to be analysed again, which imports all their cue points and grids. The only thing that appears to be missing so far is my X1 settings, but this will be straight forward to do inside the preferences. It allows you to copy all your previous settings and information across into Traktor 2. So the install process is first of all very simple. The aim was to check out the main differences and to communicate them to you. I downloaded the demo version yesterday and had a quick play around with it. The eagerly awaited Traktor Pro 2 from Native Instruments has arrived in stores and is also available for download. ![]()
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