
DJ Gear from Yesteryear — the Stanton SCS.4DJ
Stanton blazed many trails in their glory days. And for me, the SCS.4DJ is the founder of the standalone controller market, way before anyone else did it.
Stanton blazed many trails in their glory days. And for me, the SCS.4DJ is the founder of the standalone controller market, way before anyone else did it.
The mighty inMusic Brands acquisition hover sucks up yet another audio brand, this time the much loved but almost terminally ailing Stanton from Gibson.
While mixers and controllers keep getting crammed with bells and whistles, turntables are not. In fact, while still being called game changing and the price going up, features are actually being removed. I am not happy — not one bit, and hereby challenge the industry.
Over the last decade, Gibson has been on a bit of a spending spree — one of those where you don't remember buying that thing in the back of the wardrobe. And now they're paying the price and have filed for chapter 11. Is this the end for DJ brands? Our sources say quite the opposite.
Stanton has made a quiet return with a big announcement. The ST.150 M2 and STR8.150 M2 update their turntables with a new minimalist look.
Gibson finally shows the fruits of its recent purchases, with Stanton and Deckadance joining forces to deliver Deckadance 2.5.
More industry moves — this time acquisition-happy Gibson has snapped up Deckadance from Image-Line, giving them software to support their hardware.
Stanton's SCS.4DJ all in one laptop free controller gets some update love. The SC-IX reaches version 4 and gets amongst other things hot cues.
Stanton's innovative black box aka SCS.4DJ gets an OS update. And with it comes hot cues and more.
A cost effective controller for everyone - the Stanton DJC.4 with Virtual DJ ticks more boxes than ever for entry level DJs.