‘Tribe VR DJ School’ Trains You to Mix Music on Real Equipment

Partnering with DJ Kyroman and music school Pyramind, Tribe VR’s DJ School aims to teach the art of live mixing with real DJ equipment modelled in VR, with the goal of allowing your virtually acquired skills and knowledge to transfer to real life mixing equipment. The app launched in Early Access on the Oculus Store in December.

San Francisco-based VR development startup Tribe VR is concentrating on immersive learning applications for virtual and augmented reality to enable users to learn real-world skills. Tribe VR DJ School is their first project, a VR application currently optimised for Oculus Rift and Touch. It was recently showcased on the official Oculus blog alongside live performance platform NOYS VR (Early Access, 2017) and interactive music video Show It 2 Me (2017) as three examples of immersive music experiences created for VR.

In its current form, the user is presented with two digital decks and a mixer based on high-end Pioneer DJ equipment, and the basics of operating the mixer, such as adjusting equalisers and crossfading is explained by a virtual ‘Mentor’. For now, the features are limited, as the single ‘lesson’ only teaches you to play around with two preloaded tracks that are already synchronised. The ‘free play’ mode allows a little more room to experiment with sounds, but the app is missing the crucial feature of being able to import your own music.

Image courtesy Tribe VR

Vinyl Reality (2017), another Early Access VR DJ app on Steam, appears to be further along the path of features, as it allows music import, but appears to be focused on simulating mixing with traditional turntables. Tribe VR DJ School, as the name implies, wants to lean heavily towards teaching, and the developer plans to implement “DJ masterclasses” and “extensive lesson content” over the coming weeks.

This is highlighted by Tribe VR’s partnership with leading San Francisco music production school Pyramind. According to the Tribe VR blog, the team is working together with Pyramind to “develop course content, music tools and services.”

“We see VR and AR as the next steps in improving the way people learn and create music,” says Gregory Gordon, Pyramind CEO and Founder. “We are excited to be working with Tribe to develop methods and approaches for people to learn immersively.”

“We are delighted to be working with Pyramind,” writes Tom Impallomeni, Co-Founder and CEO of Tribe VR. “Greg has built an amazing business and their deep knowledge of all things relating to Music Production and DJing is a massive help to us in our quest to improve the way people learn.”

DJ School is just one example of an immersive learning experience; Tribe VR seems to have ambitions for further learning-focused VR and AR projects.

The post ‘Tribe VR DJ School’ Trains You to Mix Music on Real Equipment appeared first on Road to VR.

Vinyl Reality – DJ in VR für die HTC Vive erschienen

Preisfrage: Woher kommt eine AP, in der man als DJ in der virtuellen Realität Vinyl-Platten auflegen darf? Klar, aus der „europäischen Hauptstadt der elektronischen Musik“, Berlin. EntroPi-Games hat nach eigenen Worten die erste DJ-Mixing-App veröffentlicht, die ein klassisches DJ-Set-up in die virtuelle Realität bringt. Vinyl Reality richtet sich dabei an alte Hasen sowie Neueinsteiger in die Welt des DJing.

Vinyl Reality – DJ in VR

Vinyl Reality – DJ in VR im Early Access

Was in der Realität ein dickes Loch in die Geldbörse schlägt, kostet auf Steam lediglich 15 Euro: Mit Vinyl Reality bekommt ihr alles, was man zum Auflegen braucht: zwei Plattenspieler, einen Zwei-Kanal-DJ-Mixer, virtuelle Kopfhörer und eine virtuelle Plattensammlung, die sich aus Titeln eurer Musikbibliothek zusammensetzt. Die Software der Berliner Entwickler entstand – wie es sich gehört – in Zusammenarbeit mit echten DJs. Das scheint sich gelohnt zu haben, denn die bisherigen Rückmeldungen zur App auf Steam sind ausschließlich positiv.

Derzeit befindet sich Vinyl Reality – DJ in VR noch im Early Access, der laut den Entwickler zwischen sechs und zwölf Monaten dauern soll. In dieser Zeit wollen die Berliner die Applikation für Neulinge im DJ-Bereich noch einsteigerfreundlicher gestalten. Dabei helfen soll eine Beats-Per-Minute-Anzeige. Auch die Tutorials will EntroPi-Games noch verbessern. Außerdem planen die Entwickler, neue Umgebungen zu entwickeln, die beispielsweise Lightshows und visuelle Effekt mitbringen. Im Moment ist Vinyl Reality auf die HTC Vive abgestimmt, der Spielbereich muss mindestens 2 x 1,5 Meter groß sein.

Vinyl Reality – DJ in VR




Der Beitrag Vinyl Reality – DJ in VR für die HTC Vive erschienen zuerst gesehen auf VR∙Nerds. VR·Nerds am Werk!