As we rush in the general direction of the hot new idea, we then have a natural tendency to walk back towards that we rushed away from. Such is the case with computers and DJing. And it’s definitely the case with Pioneer DJ’s standalone XDJ-R range. The latest untethered all in one is the new XDJ-RR, a model that the nomenclature suggests is the step up from beginner and more in the area of fledgling DJ looking to dip their toe in the big wide world outside of the bedroom.
As ever, lavish PR in in our possession. So without further ado:
Bedroom to Main Room: Introducing the XDJ-RR
2-channel all-in-one DJ system for rekordboxTM that can take you all the way to the club
5th September 2018: If you want to make the transition from playing at home to performing at parties, bars and eventually clubs, our new XDJ-RR 2-channel all-in-one DJ system for rekordboxTM is the ideal piece of kit for you. The system inherits all the basic features from our club-standard NXS2 set-up and packs them into a lightweight, portable body that’s easy to take to parties and gigs as you progress through the DJ ranks.
The XDJ-RR offers you flexibility, so you can practise and perform however you prefer. It’s compatible with our professional performance application rekordbox dj (licence included) but if you don’t want to use a PC/Mac, you can export your rekordbox-analysed music to USB storage devices, plug them into the controller and play tracks directly from them.
Keep an eye on all the information you need thanks to the XDJ-RR’s 7-inch full-colour screen and use performance features and FX inherited from the NXS2 set-up – such as Hot Cues, Slip Loop and Beat FX – to craft unique mixes on the fly.
Unleash your creativity with the XDJ-RR and follow your dreams from your bedroom to the club.
A licence key for rekordbox dj worth €139 is included with the XDJ-RR so you can plug it into your PC or Mac straight out of the box and start mixing. If you already own rekordbox dj, upgrade to the latest version to use the XDJ-RR.
To help protect your XDJ-RR on the road, the DJC-RR BAG will be available from early October (EMEA only) at an SRP of £109. The high-quality bag is perfectly sized to snugly fit the all-in-one DJ system and features a Durashock moulded body and ballistic polyester to prevent damage from knocks and vibrations.
The XDJ-RR will be available from early September at an SRP of £1,019including VAT.
Watch the introduction video or find out more about the all-in-one DJ system.
KEY FEATURES OF THE XDJ-RR
- Layout and features from club-standard NXS2 set-up
The XDJ-RR inherits its layout design and many of its performance controls, features and FX from our flagship CDJ-2000NXS2 professional multi player and DJM-900NXS2 professional mixer set-up. You can play rekordbox-analysed tracks directly from USB storage drives or connect your PC/Mac to the XDJ-RR and use rekordbox dj – our professional performance application. You also have the option to use Link Export mode.
- Dual USB-A ports and single USB-B port
Connect your PC/Mac to the USB-B port at the rear of the XDJ-RR and plug USB drives into the dual USB-A ports on the top of the system to ensure seamless handovers between DJs.
- 7-inch full-colour screen
Browse and select tracks quickly and intuitively via the 7-inch full-colour screen, using the GUI design and large rotary selector from the CDJ-2000NXS2 multi player. Get a quick visual reference of track information such as playback position, BPM and waveforms for more accurate mixing and scratching.
- Performance controls
Enhance your sets using dedicated controls for performance features:
- Hot Cues – mark various points in your tracks and instantly play from them by hitting the Hot Cue pads. Create live remixes by triggering Hot Cues in unique sequences.
- Beat Loop – loop a section of a track and the XDJ-RR automatically sets the loop-out point based on the BPM.You can chop up loops on the fly for even more creative performances.
- Slip Loop – switch on Slip Loop and tracks keep playing silently in the background when you’re scratching or using other performance features. Then, when you’re ready to drop the track back in, it plays from exactly the right place.
- Beat Jump – easily change the way a track develops by jumping backwards or forwards by the number of beats you choose.
- Mixer section with professional FX
Perform smooth, precise mixes using the EQs and channel faders, which feature curves equal to those on the DJM-900NXS2 professional club mixer. You can spice up your sets with FX also inherited from the flagship mixer:
Beat FX – change the sound in sync with the beat:
- Echo
- Reverb
- Flanger
Sound Color FX – add texture and tension by simply turning the knob:
- Filter
- Noise
- Dub Echo
- Pitch
- Lightweight and portable
Take the XDJ-RR wherever you want to practise or perform thanks to its portable design. It’s compact and weighs just 5.2 kg – almost 4 kg (43%) less than the XDJ-RX2 – making it perfect for carrying to your next house party or gig.
Other features
- All-in-one design enables simple and speedy set-up
Connect the XDJ-RR to a power source and your speakers or sound system and you’re ready to perform. There’s no need for cables between the player and mixer sections.
- External audio input
Play music from external sources or mobile devices thanks to the AUX input.
- Link Export mode for rekordbox
Connect your laptop directly to the XDJ-RR with a single USB cable and play the tracks in your rekordbox library without exporting them to a USB drive.
- Includes rekordbox dj licence key
Activate the rekordbox dj licence key (worth €139) bundled with the XDJ-RR to use our professional performance application. And, if you add the DDJ-XP1 DJ sub controller to your set-up (available separately), you can unleash even more of rekordbox dj’s features – for example, by using the 32 Performance Pads to trigger extra FX – and bring more creative flair to your performances.
XDJ-RR Specifications
Frequency characteristic 20 Hz to 20 kHz (USB, AUX, MIC) S/N ratio 112 dB (USB) Total harmonic distortion 0.003% (USB) Input / Output terminals Inputs AUX x 1 (RCA) MIC x 1 (XLR & 1/4-inch TRS jack)
Outputs MASTER 1 x 1 (XLR) MASTER 2 x 1 (RCA)
PHONES x 2 (1/4-inch stereo phone jack x 1, 3.5-mm stereo mini jack x 1)
USB USB (Type A) x 2 USB (Type B) x 1
Dimensions (W x D x H) 625.0 mm x 388.5 mm x 74.2 mm Main unit weight 5.2 kg Accessories Power cord AC adapter
USB cable
Instruction manual (Quick start guide)
rekordbox dj licence key card
rekordbox system requirements
Compatible OS Mac macOS High Sierra 10.13 (updated to the latest version) macOS Sierra 10.12 (updated to the latest version)
OS X 10.11 (updated to the latest version)
Windows Windows® 10, 8.1, 7 (the latest service pack) CPU Intel® processor CoreTM i7, i5, i3 Memory 4GB or more of RAM
WHAT IS THE XDJ-RR?
In a nutshell, it’s a compact and cut down XDJ-RX2. Shorter pitch faders, lack of slip mode, and less performance pads too. The effects section is cut down, and there are less external ins and outs.
The lack of booth out and external inputs indicates the place that Pioneer DJ sees the XDJ-RR being used, and that’s not the booth. They have other more capable gear for that. But this is perfect for party rocking one track to the next with basic effects (which is generally best anyway). You can still hook the XDJ-RR up to your computer and get the full fat Rekordbox DJ arsenal if you need that little bit more though.
Obviously, some will lament that lack of features that they claim to be missing from the XDJ-RR. But they are only missing if you use them. And a huge section of the market hasn’t made the transition outside of their bedroom or house, and have little need for semi-pro features.
This in turn impacts on the bottom line. What Pioneer DJ has delivered is a complete ecosystem in the XDJ-RR that allows you to rock a dance floor (no really, you can) for around the 1K mark, and leave the laptop in the bedroom. This means that the extra 500-600 of your local currency needed for the RX2 can stay in your pocket, or allows a beginner to buy decent headphones and speakers for their home setup, which they can keep should they decide to step up the the RX2.
Having played with and ultimately not continued to use many of the bells and whistles labelled in PR as essentials, and coming from an old school vinyl background, I find that it’s easier to focus on needs rather than wants. And for me, the XDJ-RR is a big box ticker.
SUMMING UP
If you need a compact standalone that lets you leave your laptop at home, then this has your name all over it. Availability is immediate with prices of €1149/£1019/$1099.
it’s kinda ugly and a lot of wasted space… kinda numarkesque…
They were a little thrifty on the beat fx – echo, reverb, flanger. Really?
Apart from that, the unit is really close to the -RX.
Great value for a standalone unit – wedding DJs will appreciate it.
I was hoping for a different type of controller when I heard the rumors, though.
XDJ-1000MK3 or XDJ-2000 would have been cool.
But the year is not over, yet…
Really missing the BOOTH OUT on this.
Exactly the kind of thing Pioneer knows you would be missing.
That was my thought as well. But you could easily add a passive volume control to the phono outputs (RCA’s for our stateside colleagues) . :)
https://www.studiospares.com/Headphones-and-Speakers/Monitor-Controllers/Fostex-PC1EX-Monitor-Volume-Controller_229290.htm?gclid=CjwKCAjw_b3cBRByEiwAdG8Wquw9FYx-s3sPTPv1tdI_lAN4e9sZrk2cbIwe6KOMJY-T398o83_dPRoCgVkQAvD_BwE&gclsrc=aw.ds
I’ve got to say i’m really impressed with this. I don’t really need a new controller, but this is making my credit card twitch.
Let’s see what Native Instruments are up to first, before i make any stupid decisions.
“RCA’s for our stateside colleagues.” You da man!
Hi, wouldn’t you need a passive controller with two RCA inputs as well? The one you linked has a 1/4 inch phono jack input on it.
Brands like Pioneer think these products are for bedroom djs meanwhile the nexus for clubs so they think also there is no need for extra outputs… elitism at full expression.
http://cdm.link/2018/09/pioneers-latest-dj-all-in-one-wants-to-help-you-get-ready-for-clubs/
It’s not elitism if there is a feature missing that would cost almost nothing extra for them to implement, except them knowing your only choice is to buy a €500 more expensive piece of hardware to get it.
Maybe we can call it “profitable ignorance” lol.
Yeah, honestly I don’t know why people will just defend these kind of business practices.
Who is defending it? I’m just assuming how Pioneer mentality works. I’m not agree with that but I prefer to don’t rant over it.
Mmm that’s the meaning of elitism. Force users to pay for features that can be added without loss, just for get more profit.
Everything has a cost though. Adding booth out means space on the faceplate which may compromise workflow (curve control is on the front for example). It means additional internal circuitry, extra pots and knobs, extra outputs etc. And I would still argue that for the target market, booth out is a long way from essential.
Yes it’s a business decision that Pioneer DJ has made — both to differentiate the RR from the RX2, and so that you do have a reason to spend more money in the future.
All of Pioneers “bedroom use” oriented products lack a booth out. I would own a DJM-400 if it did however they only thing DJ’s will use these in the bedroom. Thank you Allen & Heath for not thinking this way for your 2 channel mixers.
Not just that, but they sound a hell of a lot better. My €250 Xone:23 sounds better than any mixer Pioneer ever released.
Nonsense, the Xone:23 is an ok sounding mixer that isn’t a patch on the sound of the 900NXS2 (which actually sounds pretty good for a Pioneer).
This isn’t quite what many DJs were expecting (4 deck answer to the MCX8000), but it will shake up the market because of the price point ($1100). It’s a LOT of functionality for the price. It makes me wonder if the four-deck XDJ-RX4 will ever be released?
The sheer grunt required to run four channels with effects and all that other digital trickery is immense. I suspect that right now it makes it financially tricky to put one out at a price that people can afford. It’s more cost effective for now to allow a laptop to do the heavy lifting right now.
That’s not true – you can get an arm processor that can handle the load for cheap. They either don’t know how to code or don’t have the proper R&D team sourcing the right components. If you can run tons of audio apps interacting with each other on a $400 ipad with no lag, there is no reason not to be able to do this on device almost 3 times the price….
Exactly in the last 8+ years investment from the mobile device industry has led to huge advances in affordable and powerful integrated processors and displays. A new budget mobile processor must be orders of magnitude more powerful than the CDJs of yesteryear. (plus it can run off the mains and use a large heatsink) This tech doesn’t really seem very 2018-19
The mention of budget mobile processors & $400 iPads has just reminded me of something.
DjTechtools ran the story below as an April fools joke, the other year. But i’m genuinely amazed that this never came to market.
https://djtechtools.com/2017/04/01/pioneer-releases-xdj-wego-smartphone-powered-cdj/
I think it could technically work but the OSs are a bit limited in terms of IO frameworks for third parties. Ever shifting form factors also makes it a bit inelegant long-term. There have been several iPad powered Djay controllers but I don’t think they set the world on fire as they were a bit of a kludge/toy-like. Still, I’m amazed the tech hasn’t been integrated more directly in 2018. The SC5000/M interface is the only thing that looks like 2018 tech to me.
Blame Apple and its mfi policy… I can imagine how hard for brands could be stay updated to a anual cycle of OS releasing when the platform doesn’t takes in consideration these brands. Musicians are a niche and djs niche of niche… turntablist niche^3
NI s2/4mk2 are traktor dj app compatible and these were promising years ago before NI drop the development… ITOH djplayer has timecode support even for first generation iPad… but djs never took that seriously neither. Djs ask for jogs in controllers and Pioneer in the sides… xP
The reason that ipad is only $400 is because of volume. According to Statista, Apple sold around 43.6 MILLION ipads in 2017. A typical successful DJ product may sell between 10 and 20K in a year. And that’s just the ipad, I would guess there are many shared components between all of the apple devices. So Apple can buy parts at a lower cost than most other companies. Apple has also had 8 years to refine the mechanical and electrical design of the ipad, and can work with their contract manufacturers to apply the best DFM practices possible – further reducing the build cost. There isn’t a component manufacturer, factory, or research firm that wouldn’t drop everything to have the opportunity to work with Apple. Pioneer (or any other company in the DJ vertical) has none of this power. Pioneer is a very big fish in a very small pond.
In the XDJ-RX, Pioneer is using the iMX6 ARM platform. I’m going to assume they’re still using it, because a company like that is going to want to maximize the return on their development costs. Companies in MI don’t just start from scratch every year with new platforms – none of them can afford to. So let’s say they’re using an ARM9 processor. That’s a beast for sure, but I’m going to bet they’re using at least a 3rd of that processing power to drive that raster interface. Suddenly things get a little tighter. Start adding in effects, song buffering for playback, looping, slicer, etc and all the other things involved in the development of a comprehensive embedded DJ product, and you can run out of resources quickly.
Also, you’re not just paying for the processor, display, and programming. You’re paying for the new tooling, the development, the testing, etc. And you need to be able to generate a return on your investment in the first year, because this category is moving rapidly.
I understand your argument, and I don’t even totally disagree with it. The “Pioneer Tax” is very real. But just because you can run XWAX on your $40 RPi doesn’t mean that these products are grossly overpriced.
This is old tech. Base price for this unit should be $500 but $1100 just typical pioneer price gauging
It is just like the CDJ-2000NXS2… except for the touchscreen. Which means learning another GUI for loops when you really do get on a NXS2.
Truth in advertising:
Just like the NXS2, except without a touchscreen, because you wouldn’t want to pay $400 more for that.
While I welcome more stand alone players/controllers & I would have been interested in this – but wow, what a joke & step back again…. a new Pioneer stand alone player that’s not compatible with flac files… which I wouldn’t have thought likely or even possible since all of their recent/hig-end players do support flac files (finally…).
Yet, here we are with a new Pioneer product, p*ssing on Pioneers claim again that you can *just* export things from Rekordbox to USB stick and it just works with Pioneers players….(* unless you use flac files…which as Pioneer markets as a ‘Hi-res formats – Crisp high-resolution audio…’ ) and so far their excuse was that it’s only older products that don’t support flac files…
So I’m curious how they justify not supporting flac with this now…