![]() For example, After Forever’s “Invisible Circles” album has a very quiet intro song with a track gain value of -46.64dB. Then in the case where it does, and I have it set to ‘song’ mode, it isn’t adjusting from track to track. Going to the track info on most of my albums does not show any replaygain information, even though I can confirm the information is there (as per above). The point is, the Sana Fuze is not reading or displaying the Replaygain tags on most albums. I have confirmed the MP3s and their Replaygain functionality is working correctly in Winamp, Foobar2000, XBMC (on both original Xbox and PC) and on my iRiver iHP140 with Rockbox firmware, and I can also visibly read the values within the tags in all of those (except XBMC) and obviously in MP3Tag and other advanced tag editors etc. The reason I do both MP3Gain and Winamp for the replaygain is because I’ve been using replaygain for so long that at one point in time some of my devices would only read the info from ID3, and others would only read it from APEv2. ![]() Winamp to calculate the Replaygain and store in the ID3 tags ![]() MP3Gain to ‘analyse’ the album info only (so it writes the APE v2 tags, but not modify the MP3 frames) LAME to encode the WAV (using -V2 -vbrnew, and whatever it was before that, and obviously with 3.98 no longer needing the vbrnew) All MP3s have been created over the past 8 years using the same process, but with just different versions of the programs (usually the version currently recommended in the Wiki of ): I have 60GB+ of MP3’s created personally by myself from my original CD collection. I am wondering whether Sansa has tested compatability with their implementation of Replaygain on the Fuze, because I am having extremely unreliable results. There is much more than just Media Monkey etc which do replay gain. Here is a link to the BeaTunes Download Page Watch Phil Morse From DigitalDJTips.Not sure about Media Jukebox, but most of the big players support replaygain these days. There’s also a ton of music discovery options built into BeaTunes, and as any experienced DJ knows you really have to listen to your music to know how to mix it well etc, which is just another feature BeaTunes offers (It has a tool that shows you via visual representation of how songs end, so you know best how to mix them).īeaTunes works on MAC or Windows, and is free to try for 14 days – and $35 to own it. Best thing is that these lists instantly show in iTunes, so you can then throw your playlist onto your iPod or phone and – bam! There’s a truly interesting playlist for your journey to work or gym session that’ll hopefully throw up all sorts of creative ideas for you for your next DJ set.”īeaTunes is directly compatible with iTunes, so using it to create lists will automatically (and dynamically) populate in our DEX 3 DJ software as well ( including KEY). “That’s where beaTunes’s “matchlists” (think “auto playlists”) are just so awesome, There are all kinds of intelligent criteria you can use to build a playlist around a particular song or set of songs that are inspiring you right now. One of the most intriquing aspects of using BeaTunes is their “MatchLists” – intelligent auto-playlists. posted an article a couple days ago about using a great piece of software kit called BeaTunes for creating better DJ sets: “5 Ways To Create Better DJ Sets With BeaTunes”
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