KDJ-One Beatmaking With Slipknot’s Sid Wilson

This video is a beatmaking demo of the new KDJ-One mobile production studio, featuring Slipknot’s Sid Wilson.

The KDJ-One is currently in development. It will offer 64 voice synthesis and 6 sequencing tracks in a portable, battery-powered design.

Details on the KDJ-One are available at the product site.

40 thoughts on “KDJ-One Beatmaking With Slipknot’s Sid Wilson

  1. I wonder what audio rates you can use with this?
    Also, this seems incredibly neat, but I feel like the tablet market might be more robust in what you can do, and also take a significant chunk of the people who would have tried something like this maybe 6 or so years ago.

  2. congratulations on giving an ass clown a free musical instrument and money, so he can just ruin all chance of anyone ever wanting it with a horrible, painful demo. also, who in the hell is this dude? i listen to electronic music not horrible commercial rock

  3. So much menu diving and an inability to live record in time… This is the worst (but most realistic) demo I’ve ever seen…. Everything you dread about a device like this is plainly demonstrated instead of slickly edited away…

  4. Wouldn’t ‘you take an iPad mini and a QuNexus over this for a portable music setup? More integrated, more compact, far more expressive and versatile, with a lot of change from $829 – this is real bad if I am recommending iPads!

  5. Haha tough crowd, and rightfully so. This thing is gonna bomb so big they’d be better off declaring bankruptcy now and liquidating their stock by giving it away as a prize in cereal boxes. If the best guy you can find to demo your groovebox is some assclown from slipknot, there’s a problem

  6. I wonder what the price will be for this and how they will convince consumers that it’s better than a Nintendo DS wiith Korg’s DS-10/DSN-12 software.

      1. Jaysus Christ, really that much?!? For that cash you get the Nintendo 3DS-XL with Korg’s software and several Mario and Zelda games. How can it be so expensive? Maybe we’re missing something here due to the shitty demo Sid did that made the product look like an iOS app. Sure, I mean, business wise it makes sense to attach a known figure to your product, but you have to instruct the person on all the features and make the person use them to sell the product. If Sid really used all the features and selling points of the product in that demo then I feel sorry for the makers of the product. I’m really confounded here. Why should people get this when they have their iPads or Nintendo DSs?

    1. BTW Cyberstep appears to be a Japanese game company that deals in robot suits and boobalicious anime girls. This must be an experiment in diversification.

      1. They really seem to be trying to cash in on the Japan market with this thing. I don’t think it has a chance in the USA, but maybe it’ll take off in Japan.

  7. In development?? They should just stop right now. Ouch-bay. All I could do watching just part of this demo was count how many times dude kept pushing up his crappy sunglasses.

  8. All that gear in the studio and he doesn’t have an iPad? Guess the kdjone guys got lucky and found the only semi famous producer that’s never heard of an iPad or Nintendo ds 🙂

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