The most unavoidable on Android: G-Stomper Studio If you have Eddy Mitchell after Dusty Kid in your playlist, even Serato Pyro won’t be able to help you. The miracle has limits and you can’t ask it to do anything and expect to have a perfect results. What else could you ask for? We tried last weekend and the app allows to do your stuff and stop minding the transitions every few minutes. The app does not only fades your tracks but it completely synchronises the beat for smooth transitions.įree and ad free, with the possibility of synchronizing your Spotify account. Rather, Serato Pyro is new party buddy that’ll take care of the transitions between your tracks for you. Finally we did that test on an iPad and an iPohone 6 Plus, you might find it harder on a smaller screen.Ĭareful! This app does NOT recreate the famous software’s interface. It would surely be nice to synch the app with your Deezer, Spotify or Soundclound accounts. Let’s hope that it might change in the next update. The only regret is that you can only use the music from our iTunes library. The app is quick and easy to use, and supplied with good tutorials. We’re quickly caught in that “air-DJ” app. Those moves are captured by your iPhone’s or iPad’s front camera. Every movement triggers a sound variation (reverb, freeze, volume changing…) and a graphic effect (smoke, ice, fire, explosion…). Clay allows you to produce sound effects on tracks from your library with your hands’ movements. It’s not about playing or composing here. Last march, Jean-Baptiste Guignard, researcher in cognitive sciences, and Thomas Amilien orchestra conductor, launched a surprising application named Clay.
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