The ColorDex DJ System : A New Interface for Live Music Mixing

Nicolas Villar, Hans Gellersen, Matt Jervis, and Alexander Lang

Proceedings of the International Conference on New Interfaces for Musical Expression

  • Year: 2007
  • Location: New York City, NY, United States
  • Pages: 264–269
  • Keywords: Novel interfaces, live music-mixing, cube-based interfaces, crossfading, repurposing HDDs, accelerometer-based cubic control
  • DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.1179475 (Link to paper)
  • PDF link

Abstract:

This paper describes the design and implementation of a new interface prototype for live music mixing. The ColorDex system employs a completely new operational metaphor which allows the mix DJ to prepare up to six tracks at once, and perform mixes between up to three of those at a time. The basic premises of the design are: 1) Build a performance tool that multiplies the possible choices a DJ has in respect in how and when tracks are prepared and mixed; 2) Design the system in such a way that the tool does not overload the performer with unnecessary complexity, and 3) Make use of novel technology to make the performance of live music mixing more engaging for both the performer and the audience. The core components of the system are: A software program to load, visualize and playback digitally encoded tracks; the HDDJ device (built chiefly out of a repurposed hard disk drive), which provides tactile manipulation of the playback speed and position of tracks; and the Cubic Crossfader, a wireless sensor cube that controls of the volume of individual tracks, and allows the DJ to mix these in interesting ways.

Citation:

Nicolas Villar, Hans Gellersen, Matt Jervis, and Alexander Lang. 2007. The ColorDex DJ System : A New Interface for Live Music Mixing. Proceedings of the International Conference on New Interfaces for Musical Expression. DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.1179475

BibTeX Entry:

  @inproceedings{Villar2007,
 abstract = {This paper describes the design and implementation of a new interface prototype for live music mixing. The ColorDex system employs a completely new operational metaphor which allows the mix DJ to prepare up to six tracks at once, and perform mixes between up to three of those at a time. The basic premises of the design are: 1) Build a performance tool that multiplies the possible choices a DJ has in respect in how and when tracks are prepared and mixed; 2) Design the system in such a way that the tool does not overload the performer with unnecessary complexity, and 3) Make use of novel technology to make the performance of live music mixing more engaging for both the performer and the audience. The core components of the system are: A software program to load, visualize and playback digitally encoded tracks; the HDDJ device (built chiefly out of a repurposed hard disk drive), which provides tactile manipulation of the playback speed and position of tracks; and the Cubic Crossfader, a wireless sensor cube that controls of the volume of individual tracks, and allows the DJ to mix these in interesting ways. },
 address = {New York City, NY, United States},
 author = {Villar, Nicolas and Gellersen, Hans and Jervis, Matt and Lang, Alexander},
 booktitle = {Proceedings of the International Conference on New Interfaces for Musical Expression},
 doi = {10.5281/zenodo.1179475},
 issn = {2220-4806},
 keywords = {Novel interfaces, live music-mixing, cube-based interfaces, crossfading, repurposing HDDs, accelerometer-based cubic control },
 pages = {264--269},
 title = {The ColorDex DJ System : A New Interface for Live Music Mixing},
 url = {http://www.nime.org/proceedings/2007/nime2007_264.pdf},
 year = {2007}
}