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ChatGPT’s Apple Music Integration Is Now Live

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OpenAI’s ChatGPT has officially become a much sweeter companion for music lovers. Through a new native integration, ChatGPT users can now link their Apple Music accounts directly to the chat interface. This allows the AI to traverse Apple’s massive global catalog, curate custom sets, and build playlists on command. Setup is straightforward, users can simply […]

The post ChatGPT’s Apple Music Integration Is Now Live appeared first on EDMTunes.

Time Warp Coming to Miami in 2026

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The year-round availability of Miami’s Factory Town is already paying dividends. It was just announced that Germany’s beloved Time Warp techno festival will be landing in Miami for the first time in 2026. On April 25, 2026, Time Warp Miami will come to Factory Town, courtesy of Insomniac East. No gimmicks. No distractions. Just pure […]

The post Time Warp Coming to Miami in 2026 appeared first on EDMTunes.

Steve Aoki x KAAZE – Our New EP Live: 3 Explosive Performances Across Australia

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Get ready to experience Steve Aoki and KAAZE like never before. Travel with us across Australia as we deliver three massive, high-energy performances from our new EP. The adrenaline of stepping into roaring crowds, and the magic only live music can create. #steveaoki #kaaze #edm #Australia SUBSCRIBE on YouTube: http://youtube.com/steveaoki LIKE on Facebook: http://facebook.com/steveaoki FOLLOW on Twitter: http://twitter.com/steveaoki FOLLOW on Instagram: http://instagram.com/steveaoki FOLLOW on TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@steveaoki FOLLOW on Snapchat: steveaoki Subscribe to Steve Aoki's YouTube channel for the latest music videos, tour footage, mixes, and the best in dance music! New videos every Wednesday, Thursday, and Friday!

Orbital legend Phil Hartnoll leads second wave of announcements for Psychic Dancehall festival

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Following a first wave announcement and early bird tickets selling out in 48 hours, electronic music legend Phil Hartnoll (Orbital) has been added to close the Wardwick stage at Psychic...

The post Orbital legend Phil Hartnoll leads second wave of announcements for Psychic Dancehall festival appeared first on Decoded Magazine.

In Waves - THE WEIGHT

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? Download | Stream ↪︎ https://to.cloudkid.com/theweight ? Official Spotify Playlists ↪︎ http://bit.ly/NB3Spotify ? ? All Nightblue Music Socials ? ► https://linktr.ee/nightbluemusic ? No Copyright Playlist ↪︎ http://bit.ly/NB3NoCopyrightPlaylist ? Demos / Music Submission ↪︎ https://nightbluemusic.portal.district.biz ? In Waves ? ► https://www.instagram.com/inwavesband/ Make sure to show your support to Stone for their awesome artwork ^_^ ? Background Image ↪︎ https://www.pixiv.net/en/users/14355682 https://x.com/KSorede If we did not properly credit your artwork or if you'd like us to not use your artwork please send us an email to nightbluemusic@nightblue3.net and we will correct it immediately! ❗️ For business inquiries and other issues please contact nightbluemusic@nightblue3.net ❗️ In Waves - THE WEIGHT

Vocana – A New Steaming Service Challenging Spotify

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Vocana is a new streaming service with the stated goal of putting artists first. We spoke with President Neil Sheehan to find out how the venture plans to beat Spotify.

Taking on Spotify is no easy task. That’s what new music streaming service Vocana is aiming to do. Aside from Spotify, there’s also Apple, Tidal, Amazon, and all the other established players to contend with. Vocana plans to do things differently, however, with a user-centric payment model that sends your subscription money to the artists that you listen to, and royalty rates much higher than the industry standard.

We spoke with Neil Sheehan, the President of Vocana, to find out how the upstart company plans to compete in a very crowded marketplace.

Attack: How does your royalty payment system work?

NS: It’s one of the four pillars (that we’re founded on). The first one was, How do we pay independent artists more fairly? The large DSPs use pro rata. Your $10 subscription fee goes in this large pot and it gets broken down by market share. It doesn't go by who you listen to. Even if you and I are listening to, say, Morrissey, Taylor Swift is going to get the largest pot of this. 

The proof will be in the pudding when bands are showing checks that they're making more (with Vocana) than they would be pro rata. Just look at the stats. There are between eight to 12 million artists on Spotify and 99.8% make less than $10,000. There's a huge swath of artists there that want to get paid more.

How will you still make money?

We are like any other streaming platform. We have to pay out 30 percent of subscription fees to MLCs, or mechanical royalties, and then to PROs (Performing Rights Organizations). Then we take a small margin of about 20-plus percent, and the rest goes back to the artist.

Why have you chosen to exclude major labels? 

Well, if you look at the history of how pro rata started, it was because Napster came out and people were pilfering stuff. And then Spotify … went out and did deals with the major labels, or at least the larger major labels at the time. Part of that was getting advances and getting shares, but also cutting them good deals based on market share versus being allocated towards artists. 

I'm not in the boardroom of Spotify or Tidal. Would they want to try a user-centric system? Do they think it works? I've seen papers that people have put out and said it doesn't work for major label artists. But I think they have an anathema towards it right now because their partners don't want it. For us, our ethos, our North Star, has always been to assist independent artists. Major label artists already get enough help.

Neil Sheehan - President of Vocana

[quote align=right text="(We’re) definitely not competing, just giving artists a better platform to get discovered first, and maybe get paid as well."]

I see that you’re also allowing for merch sales.

We have a third-party API (Application Programming Interface) with Printful. Bands can create their own web store within our app. Every fan has a profile, every band has a profile, and there’s a streaming player on it. What an artist can do is create a merch profile within their profile and send their fans to it. Printful does all of the design for them, all the shipping for them. The band doesn't have to pay anything in advance. Essentially, it's print on demand. The artist doesn't have to do anything but accept a royalty check from all of the merch. 

8 Best Places to Buy DJ Headphones: Online & In-Store 2025

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Finding the right DJ headphones goes beyond picking a model. You need to find a retailer you trust with fair prices, solid stock, and flexible policies. Some stores push products with high margins regardless of quality. Others carry limited selections or lack staff who understand DJ gear. Return windows vary dramatically from one retailer to another. When you're investing in equipment for gigs and studio work, you want confidence that you're getting a fair deal and protection if something doesn't work out.

This guide breaks down eight proven places to buy DJ headphones in 2025. You'll learn what each retailer carries, which DJs they serve best, their price structures, and their return policies. Some excel at online shopping with detailed specs and reviews. Others let you test headphones in person before committing. By the end, you'll know exactly where to shop based on your priorities, whether that's selection, price, customer service, or hands on testing before purchase.

1. Guitar Center

Guitar Center stocks one of the largest selections of DJ headphones among retail chains. You'll find major brands like Pioneer DJ, Audio-Technica, Sennheiser, V-MODA, and Sony across their 250+ stores nationwide and online platform. Their inventory spans entry-level models starting around $30 to professional-grade headphones exceeding $500. Each product listing includes detailed specifications, customer reviews, and compatibility information to help you make informed decisions.

1. Guitar Center

What you will find here

Guitar Center carries over 100 different DJ headphone models at any given time. Their selection includes closed-back designs for live mixing, studio monitoring headphones with neutral sound profiles, and wireless options for mobile DJs. You can filter by brand, price range, features like swivel earcups or detachable cables, and impedance levels. The site displays current stock levels for both online orders and local store pickup.

Best for these DJs

This retailer serves beginning DJs who want to try before buying and intermediate players upgrading their gear. Guitar Center's widespread physical presence lets you test multiple models during a single visit. Their staff includes DJs and musicians who can answer technical questions about frequency response, isolation, and durability. You benefit most if you prefer hands-on evaluation over purely online research.

Best for these DJs

"Testing headphones in person reveals comfort issues and sound characteristics that specs alone can't capture."

Online and in store experience

Their website offers free shipping on most orders over $49 with options for same-day delivery in select markets. In-store, you can demo headphones at dedicated DJ equipment sections with mixers and decks set up for realistic testing. Staff can order out-of-stock items from other locations. Online purchases qualify for in-store pickup, typically ready within two hours.

Price range, deals and policies

Guitar Center matches prices from authorized dealers and runs frequent promotions on DJ gear. You'll find entry models from $30 to $80, mid-range options between $100 and $250, and professional headphones from $300 to $600. Their 45-day return policy covers opened products with original packaging. Extended warranties cost extra but cover accidental damage. Financing options start at $25 per month for purchases over $299.

2. Amazon

Amazon dominates online

DJ Audio Interface for Streaming: 2025 Top 5 Picks & Guide

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Your DJ controller sounds amazing in the booth. But when you stream that same mix through your laptop mic or phone, it becomes a muddy mess. Viewers bounce. The audio cuts out. Levels distort. You know you need better gear, but audio interfaces come with confusing specs and price tags that range from $30 to $300. Which one actually works for streaming DJ sets?

This guide breaks down the five best DJ audio interfaces for streaming in 2025. You'll learn what features matter most for livestreaming, how each interface handles real setups with mixers and controllers, and which price point fits your needs. Whether you stream from your phone at home or broadcast multi-hour sets from a club booth, one of these interfaces will give your audience the clean studio sound they deserve.

1. IK Multimedia iRig Stream Pro

The iRig Stream Pro from IK Multimedia gives you professional audio quality for livestreaming DJ sets across multiple platforms at once. This interface works with iOS, Android, Mac, and PC devices, eliminating compatibility headaches when you switch between streaming setups.

1. IK Multimedia iRig Stream Pro

How to choose a DJ audio interface

You need to match your interface to your streaming device and controller outputs. Check if your phone or tablet requires Lightning, USB-C, or micro-USB connections. Your DJ controller likely uses RCA or quarter-inch outputs, so pick an interface that accepts those inputs without requiring multiple adaptors.

Why the iRig Stream Pro stands out for DJs

The iRig Stream Pro includes multitrack recording that captures your mix in separate layers for post-production editing. You can monitor your audio through zero-latency headphone monitoring while streaming, catching mix errors before your audience hears them. The interface ships with cables for Lightning, USB-C, and USB-A connections in the box.

Digital DJ Tips calls the iRig Stream Pro their favorite dj audio interface for streaming because it handles both old and new device types without extra purchases.

Inputs, outputs, and connectivity options

You get two combo XLR/quarter-inch inputs that accept line-level signals from DJ controllers or mixers. The device includes a dedicated headphone output with volume control, letting you plug speakers directly into the interface when your controller lacks multiple outputs. Phone connection requires USB-C or Lightning, while computer streaming uses standard USB-A.

Streaming and recording workflow tips

Connect your controller's master output to the iRig Stream Pro inputs using RCA-to-quarter-inch cables. Route your speakers through the interface's monitor output to hear what viewers hear. Launch your streaming software and select the iRig as your audio input device.

Ideal user and price range

Mobile DJs who stream from phones and tablets benefit most from this interface. The price sits around $150, making it reasonable for semi-professional use without breaking into studio-grade territory.

2. Roland Go:Mixer Pro X

The Roland Go:Mixer Pro X gives mobile streamers a compact solution for broadcasting DJ sets directly from smartphones or tablets. This dj audio interface for streaming packs seven input channels into a palm-sized unit, letting you mix multiple audio sources without a laptop. Roland designed this device specifically for content creators who need professional audio without carrying studio racks.

Mobile friendly features for ph
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