Review: Native Instruments Traktor Kontrol S2

While it’s not the game-changer the Kontrol S4 was, the 2-channel Kontrol S2 delivers a formidable all-in-one Traktor Pro 2 package for budding digital DJs, as well as experienced controllerists. On one hand, it’s tempting to call the S2 the S4 Lite, and on the other hand, that’s not such a bad thing to be. Let’s check out this little brother and decide if it deserves a pat on the back or a vicious noogie.

Editor’s Note: The S2 was updated in September, 2013. Check out the new controller here and the review here

Reviewed: Native Instruments Kontrol S2

Price: $669 (MSRP), $599 (common retail price)

Communication: MIDI over USB (AC or bus powered)  /  (Mac and Windows)

Available: Now in the web store

Ships with: Traktor Pro 2, loop and one-shot collection, international power adapters, USB 2.0 cable

Weight: 6 pounds (2.7 kg)

Dimensions: 17.2 x 11.5 x 1.7 inches (43.8 x 29.2 x 4.4 cm)

System Requirements: Windows XP (latest Service Pack, 32-bit), Windows Vista (latest Service Pack, 32-bit/64-bit) or Windows 7 (latest Service Pack, 32-bit/64-bit), Pentium 4 2.4GHz or Intel Core or AMD Athlon 64, 2 GB RAM, USB 2.0 port, 500 MB free disk space (minimum) / Mac OS X 10.6.8 or 10.7, Intel Core Duo, 2 GB RAM, USB 2.0 port, 500 MB free disk space (minimum)

THE GOOD:

Same great sound quality as the Kontrol S4 and other NI audio interfaces. Added independent gain control for the booth outputs. Includes full version of Traktor Pro 2. MIDI mode for controlling other MIDI gear. USB bus power option. Designed to squeeze the most out of the reduced number of controls.

THE BAD:
Still no EQ kill switches. No auxiliary line input or footswitch input. No MIDI I/O. Can’t switch from Group to Single effects modes with the hardware. Decks C and D are available only as Sample Decks. No hardware controls for the loop recorder or FX Units 3 & 4. No dedicated Filter knob. Limited control over the Sample Decks. No price break for licensed Traktor Pro users.

THE BOTTOM LINE:

Shaving inches, weight, and $300 off the Kontrol S4 also means a significant slash in the utility of the Kontrol S2. However, with two Track Decks, two Sample Decks, robust looping, killer effects, a high-quality 24/96 soundcard, and a full copy of Traktor Pro 2, the S2 could be the go-to choice for beginners, those switching to Traktor, or for those switching over from vinyl or DVS.

FUN SIZE


Last year, the Kontrol S4 made a splash in the DJ world as NI’s first four-deck controller. Its Traktor Pro S4 software set the groundwork for Traktor Pro 2’s Sample Decks and enhanced looping features. It broke ground, caused a lot of drooling, and made me personally switch to Traktor for good. Yet its burly size and $899 street price made some prospective buyers hit pause. It only weighed 7.5 pounds, but its 19.7 x 12.7 x 2-inch frame caused some problems for the backpack set.

Enter the Kontrol S2, a more standard-size 2-channel controller that still attempts to wield the extraordinary power of Traktor Pro 2. At 6 pounds, it does feel significantly lighter than the S4, and its 17.2 x 11.5-inch dimensions add up to 198 square inches of tabletop footprint, compared to the S4’s 250 square inches.

For that reduction, the S2 loses a whole lot more than just 2 channel strips. Gone also are the hardware Loop Recorder controls, dedicated filter knobs, a row of buttons and the display off of each deck’s sample/loop controls, and various other buttons, like toggles for Snap and Quantize modes. There are no Channel C and D audio inputs for incorporating DVS systems or MIDI I/O.

But I’ll stop focusing on the negative and point out the real advantages of the S2, mainly the legacy technology passed down from the S4: the same tight hardware/software integration—featuring NI’s NHL communication protocol for 30 times more data transfer than MIDI, a solid build quality, smart, efficient control layout, an excellent 24-bit/96kHz soundcard, and of course Traktor Pro 2 software, which the S4’s design helped inform.

JOG WHEELS AND CROSSFADER

It’s the same story here as on the S4—a story worth re-reading. The jog wheels’ top plates are touch-sensitive and switch-activated (like the CDJ jog wheels), giving you an accurate sense of timing. Their high-resolution gives you 1,000 points per revolution for excellent responsiveness. In short, these are small, but still nice scratching wheels—for a controller. If you live or die by scratching, you’re probably not making them your main instrument. You can also turn off scratching on the software preferences, if the thought of accidentally scratching a track during a show makes you wet yourself a little.

Rubberized, outer rims on the jog wheels have magnetic resistance and provide sensitive and precise tempo bending. You can also press Shift and use a jog wheel to quickly scroll forward and backward within a track.

The S2 crossfader feels exactly the same as on the S4—perfectly fine for most controllers, but again not made for battle DJs. Neither is it officially replaceable.

BROWSING TRACKS

The S2’s track browsing scheme is a bit scaled back, but should still keep your fingers off the computer. A single Browse push-encoder and Load A and B buttons do the trick. Turning the Browse encoder scrolls through tracks, and pushing it toggles the Browser Layout for a bigger look at your tracks. Shift + Browse encoder scrolls through playlists and folders on the left, and pushing opens those folders. The only big thing missing from the S4’s feature set is a way to quickly headphone-preview a track from the controller.

TWO TURNTABLES AND A MICROPHONE… AND SAMPLERS

For a while now, four-deck controllers have been the standard to keep up with the industry trends. We know a lot of you rockstars out there actually use 3-4 decks in your sets, and I’d like to say thank you for being awesome. More decks allow greater freedom and the potential for sicker sets (or worse trainwrecks). But to some extent, the four-deck trend is partially a way to keep the hardware and software iteration cycle chugging along and to justify replacing old models with the new during every specified fiscal quarter. When the market is fully saturated with four-deck controllers, something else will magically come along.

With the S2, NI engineered a rather elegant compromise: Track Decks for Decks A and B, and Sample Decks for Decks C and D. This solution gives you a large part of the functionality that many people want out of third and fourth decks, without the bloat of the extra channel strips. Don’t get me wrong, I’d much rather have the full channel strip control over the Sample Decks like you have with the S4, but the S2 still gives you hardware control over the sample’s volume, playback and effects. Their channel strips, including dedicated filter, are intact in the software, so you could parse them out to another controller if necessary.

Each Sample Deck has four sample slots for holding one-shots or loops of up to 32 beats. Decks C and D record from and sync to the tempo of Decks A and B respectively. You can load samples from the Track Collection (where sample from previous sessions are saved), create a loop and assign it to a Sample button, or create a new sample based on the current loop length by hitting an empty Sample button, either while the Track Deck is playing or stopped.

You switch to Sample mode by hitting the A or B buttons in the Samples section of the S2 mixer. That toggles the Cue/Samples section of each deck to control the creation and playback of samples. The lone Samples knob controls the overall volume of all 8 sample slots, which is kind of a drag, but you do still have individual sample volume controls in the software. You can assign Deck C and D to FX Units 1 & 2 using Shift + FX 1 or FX 2 buttons underneath the channel Gain encoders.

In the absence of the dedicated Filter knobs on the S4, you can control the filter of Decks A or B with Shift + Gain. That’s a less-than-ideal solution, because the Gain encoder is notched, resulting in filter sweeps of ±4 percent with every notch. The filter control for Decks C and D is software-only.

With the S4, you could switch the full deck controls to C or D, giving you the ability to scratch or tempo bend the samples with the jog wheels, but that’s not the case with the S2. Also, we’re still waiting for the ability to save and then reload groups of 2-8 samples with group names, which would be a powerful tool for live remixing. Pretty please, NI?

In case you were wondering, I was able to make Decks C and D into Track Decks in the software and load songs into them. However, the S2 does not output their audio.

Oh yeah, about that microphone. You can plug a condenser mic (no phantom power available) into the 1/4-inch microphone input on the back panel. There’s also a Mic Gain control in the back, and a Mic Engage button on the front for activating the mic channel, which routes directly to the main output. You can use the mic channel whether the S2 is connected to a computer or not.

CUE POINTS AND LOOPS

When not in Sample Mode, the Cue/Samples sections are dedicated to setting and playing Hotcues, NI’s catch-all term for cue points and live loops. You get eight of them per track, but only four hardware buttons. Their LEDs light up blue when there’s a cue point stored there, or green for loops, which can be bounced to open Sample slots. Like with the S4, we recommend using a good 16-button or pad grid like the Maschine or the MIDI Fighter with the S2 if you engage in spirited cue point juggling. The four cue buttons here aren’t particularly well spaced or constructed for being played like a percussion instrument.

With fewer controls in the Cue/Samples section than the S4, the S2 makes judicious use of the Shift button. For instance, the Loop Move encoder moves the active loop or the track playhead forward or backward by the length of the current Loop size, or by 1-beat steps when Shift is held.

If you don’t need the Loop In and Out buttons for creating loops of irregular size on the fly, the S2 Control Options in the Preferences let you switch them to Auto Loop. After that the Loop In and Out buttons will create new 4-beat or 8-beat loops, respectively or halve or double the length of active loops, respectively.

EFFECTS

Traktor’s effects have established their own legend and could be the subject of their own review; NI even sells a bundle of 12 of them as a separate product. But since the S4 dropped, Traktor Pro 2 has added four new effects, bringing the total to 32. The new crop consists of Tape Delay, Ramp Delay, Bouncer and Auto Bouncer. The Bouncers give you a fun way to play with both controlled and uncontrolled re-pitchings and re-triggerings of segments of the incoming audio, and of course all of the effects sound great and offer tempo syncing.

With the S2, you only get hardware control over FX Units 1 and 2. You can activate all four FX Units in the Preferences, but you’ll only have software control over Units 3 and 4.

AUDIO INTERFACE

To my ears, the 24-bit/96-kHz audio interfaces of the Kontrol S2 and the Kontrol S4, which used the same components and technology as the well-regarded NI Audio 4 DJ, sound the same. What that means essentially is that you’re getting not just a usable sound card inside of a controller, but one that you’ll use happily. These soundcards hold their own against dedicated units that cost more than the S4 itself, only sacrificing the tiniest bit of warmth and definition under close scrutiny.

Connections include two main outputs: balanced 1/4-inch TRS (that can route to XLR inputs with the right cables) and unbalanced RCA for booth outputs. In answer to user feedback, NI included a separate Gain Level on the back panel for the RCA booth outputs.

The headphone section up front includes your 1/4-inch stereo headphone out, Cue Volume and Cue Mix knobs, both of which can push into the unit to stay out of the way.

The S2 also shares the same high output levels as the S4, which adds up to plenty of gain from both mains and the headphones.

USB BUS POWER VS. POWER ADAPTER

Just as with the S4, the S2 comes with an AC Adapter with a set of international plugs. AC power, however, is optional. You can run the S2 off of a fully powered USB 2.0 port. If you go that route, the LEDs dim down to what I consider a nearly unusable level, unless in darkness, and the headphone level drops slightly.

On the plus side, when I pulled the power cord out during use, the main audio output did not cut out at all, as it did for a couple of seconds with the S4. I could also hotplug the AC cord right back in with no disruption. This means the USB cable is your life line, and the robust USB port holds the cable stubbornly in place, much more strongly than your average printer.

INSIDE LOOK


Our very own “Army of me” made an excellent video showing a performance and look at the s2 in person!

DOWNSIZED: DO MORE WITH LESS?

If you’ve ever been “downsized” from a job, you may have heard the conveniently trite cliché that “this is a chance to explore new opportunities”. Well, just as that is an attempt to polish a turd, it would be misleading and incorrect to say that the scaled back controls and capabilities on the 2-channel Kontrol S2 free you up to unleash your mixing creativity to an even greater extent than on the 4-channel Kontrol S4. Yes, in the hands of a master, you may never know the difference (see video below). After all, a Picasso is a Picasso whether it’s a pencil sketch or an oil painting. A creative DJ has plenty to work with here. Any way you slice it, the heart of the operation is Traktor Pro 2; you just may need to touch the dreaded computer or use a supplementary controller to use everything the software offers.

Most likely, DJs aren’t going to choose between the S4 or the S2 anyway. The S2 steps in as an excellent choice for Traktor Pro 2 users for whom the S4 was just too big and bulky, too overwhelming, or too expensive. At $599 street, the S2 includes Traktor Pro 2 ($199 street on its own) and a high-quality audio interface ($99 street for the Traktor Audio 2), leaving about $300 on the price for just the controller. That’s a hands-down good buy if you don’t already own Traktor Pro. Unfortunately, there’s no discount on the price for licensed Traktor Pro or Pro 2 users.

In the year or so since the Kontrol S4’s launch, the number of new controllers that have vied for your attention seems almost laughable when you think about how controllers themselves were being laughed at just a few years ago. In this now-crowded space, a new controller that’s a scaled-back version of a better controller seems about as exciting as another club instituting a dress code.

Still, if the biggest fault of the S2 is that it’s not the S4, that makes it the second-best all-in-one controller for Traktor. How does that grab ya? Please let us know your thoughts, praises, criticisms, and what you’re wearing in the comments.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR: Markkus Rovito is a journalist who’d rather be DJing, drumming, and singing, all of which he does as much as possible during work hours. The former Tech Editor for the defunct Remix Magazine has also written for Electronic Musician, Keyboard, Gearwire, Mac | Life, Maximum PC, and a bunch of stuff you can’t get on your iPad.

Additional Links:

Traktor Kontrol S2: Exclusive Look

Review: Native Instruments Traktor Kontrol S4

Purchase the Kontrol S4 with a Complimentary DVD tutorial by Ean Golden

comparedj techkontrol s2Native InstrumentsReviewrevieweds2s2 vs s4S4
Comments (68)
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  • Nate Herrema

    Would not recommend. Native Instruments has notoriously terrible customer service and even worse hardware build quality. USB ports & wire on these things will go bad, just a matter of time.

  • DJ Tom Howson

    Dont buy this controller… my first one lasted me just under a year of bedroom use. i then got 4 residencies a week and it broke after 2 months the usb input on the back of the controller fell back into the unit but because native instruments take so long to fix things i had to go out and buy a new one whilst the other one got sent off to be repaired. not much of a issue as id have a back up incase anything ever went wrong, after 2 months the new S2 fader broke! the on screen fader in traktor started jumping around (all software up to date and S2 calibrated) so after all the problems ive had ive decided to upgrade to a Vestax VCI 400 due Native Instruments hardware been unreliable which is the last thing i need when im DJ’ing 4 nights a week as a full time job. NOTE: i still love there software

  • SomeDJ

    I came across this post only now, as I was looking around for some other tips regarding the S2.

    I only recently bought an S2, which is fairly expensive this side of the world, but got a great deal from the suppliers and it’s still more expensive than some other 2 channel controllers around here, but none of them seem to match.

    But here’s the thing. As a resident DJ at a local club here (playing Tuesdays to Saturdays each night from 9pm till 4am) it was just such an amazingly viable move.

    At the club there’s a standard setup of 2 decks (Pioneer CDJ-350 and a CJD-400 coupled with an ancient DJM-300)… Now, this equipment has been absolutely abused by DJ’s that come to play guest sets and whatnot, as they simply don’t seem to care about the equipment, and that was one thing that drove me over to getting a controller. I use MY gear, and I KNOW that it’s in perfect condition.

    Moving away from CD’s and flash drives a definite added bonus, as CD’s get scratched quite quickly, get stolen etc etc etc.

    Back to the topic: I can’t see why so many people are hating on the S2? It’s marketed and sold as described: A 2 channel DJ controller. Yes – there’s mappings to run 4 decks and whatnot, and let’s face it: The entire console can be remapped – so if someone has an issue – map it.

    As for the loop size indicator – I don’t get the issue with that question. Are they blind? On your monitor there’s a clear display of what loop size you’re currently running.

    EQ kill buttons could be nice, but it’s definitely not the most important factor on a mixer – you’ve got knobs anyway.

    It’s sad that people will always hate on something, purely because they WANT to hate.

    I love the S2. It’s a great, stable, reliable little controller with no issues that can’t be dealt with if you just use your brain.

  • pocketSpiral

    I bought an S2 and it rocks!! I have a small desk and an S4 would have been hanging over the edge and been falling off and all that kind of shiz…..I love my S2. So at least I can get the experience that a dedicated controller gives you, so when I do graduate to a bigger desk I can also graduate to a bigger controller that has a similar look and feel to my existing. DJTT do a great job, keep up the good work. Oh and clearly some of you missed the parts in the review where the negatives are talked about? I once had a vestax mixer and it smelt like a fart.

  • Jash Ashar

    what do you think about Traktor S2 and Traktor F1`s combination,
    i believe this was the sampling problem is solved??? right????
     

  • Jotalink

    Has anyone compared the s2 with the numark idj pro ipad compatible that also comes with 2 channels… which one of these units is better? 

  • delfino

    how could the s2 jog wheels control effect units 3&4? i got the mapping that allows control over effect units 1&2 which isn’t a problem at all.
    thanks

  • Speedbull

    Can anyone tell me how can i control samples gain,eq & filter knob through kontrol s2?

  • Justin Levi

    This is a fantastic review. I’ve been toying with the idea of grabbing one of these for a while now. Not sure if the s2 is better than the x1 with some of my own midi controllers though. 

    An amazing DJ in our crew J.Cush has been using this for a while and he’s been killing it lately. 

    Check out a set he recorded at the Woogie Stage, Lightning in a Bottle 

    I’m definitely planning to put some time on this and see if it’s worth buying. duckbutter

  • Soul Fabulous

    What I can’t understand is why everybody bitches about the lack of something but the product functions great but would rather an inferior product with all the bells and whistles. I love NI’s approach to this unit. As much as I love to rock ; decks and filters etc. people tend to forget NI still allows the individual customize to his or her needs. I love their approach they are taking. By the way you guys need to get off this shooting down DJTT tip. Ean has already shown you what can do to customizing this unit. I love the fact they added a booth out.

  • Fmartorellb

    Hey, i have a really big question, and you may think i’m crazy, but i would like to know that if you can use your s2 or s4, as a simple souncard, i mean. i’m a dj of a club in barcelona, and sometimes, i have to work in the bar, and most of the time mixing, and when i have to go to the bar, i use to put some sessions from iTunes with my actual controller(torq exponent) using it for the main out.
    is it able to do the same with the s2 or s4???

    hope you understand my question, sorry for my english! I’m from spain!

    i wold be awesome to receive an answer to: fmartorellb@gmail:disqus .com

  • Andreigrum

    Nice review. I can’t wait to get my hands on one 😀

  • cabdoctor

    I may be wrong, but what is this giving me that a Numark Omni Control and a Midifighter wouldn’t for about $200 less?

  • Anonymous

    This might be a bit off topic, but given that the S4 is now about a year old, does anyone have an idea if, and when, Native Instruments will bring to the market (hopefully in early 2012) a revised newer version of the S4 hardware (call it for argument sake, the “S4.1”)? The reason I ask, is that the S4 has now had a full year or so to be test driven by a variety of DJ’s in real world situation, and there must be some of the hardware layout features that are currently not idea or causing issues that Native Instruments will want corrected. The S4 is Native Instruments first venture into the hardware mini-controller market, and therefore there must be a newer version that will be coming out in the future to address issues and feedback from a variety of users around the world, and to also address what their competitors are doing in regards to digital DJ hardware. I rather get an up-dated S4.1 due to the 4-deck approach than the 2-deck scaled down S2 recently released. Thanks in advance for any feedback that others can provide.

  • Anonymous

    This might be a bit off topic, but given that the S4 is now about a year old, does anyone have an idea if, and when, Native Instruments will bring to the market (hopefully in early 2012) a revised newer version of the S4 hardware (call it for argument sake, the “S4.1”)? The reason I ask, is that the S4 has now had a full year or so to be test driven by a variety of DJ’s in real world situation, and there must be some of the hardware layout features that are currently not idea or causing issues that Native Instruments will want corrected. The S4 is Native Instruments first venture into the hardware mini-controller market, and therefore there must be a newer version that will be coming out in the future to address issues and feedback from a variety of users around the world, and to also address what their competitors are doing in regards to digital DJ hardware. I rather get an up-dated S4.1 due to the 4-deck approach than the 2-deck scaled down S2 recently released. Thanks in advance for any feedback that others can provide.

  • Grollhanin

    quote: “Still, if the biggest fault of the S2 is that it’s not the S4, that makes it the second-best all-in-one controller for Traktor.”

    there might be some disagreement upon this…

    the s2 might be designed for traktor but it misses even more software controls than the s4. so it could be as well called “insufficient”. the actual concept of releasing these products is wrong from the very start. when designing a product you should start form the bottom up, build a solid small controller and then ADD useful or requested things. But starting with the so-called “flagship” (which it is not) and then stripping it down to compete in another market niche won’t bring up great results. Vestax did it the other way and it will pay off.

    sure, every controller is compromise (except the faderfox 4midiloop) but this thing…excuse me.

    This is one of the toys you (or your parents) buy (you) when starting djing and shortly after you realise that it is a rip-off and some decent money thrown out of the window. if you are convincing your parents might agree on the s4 … and so it goes on.

  • Dustin

    Everything the Denon HC4500 has been doing for several years now, but taking up twice the space! For only $100 more!

  • armyofme4340

    whoop whoop

  • armyofme4340

    whoop whoop

  • armyofme4340

    whoop whoop

  • armyofme4340

    whoop whoop

    • 303bassline

      nice routine ma’am

      • armyofme4340

        Thank you sir. Or I guess I shouldn’t assume you are a sir.

  • GameChangah

    The S4 was a game changer?   lol.

  • GameChangah

    The S4 was a game changer?   lol.

  • GameChangah

    The S4 was a game changer?   lol.

  • GameChangah

    The S4 was a game changer?   lol.

  • Lifein

    pimps up, controllers down.

  • J.D. Cohen

    The S2 seems like it would be good for my needs, but as a Maschine owner, my experiences with NI customer service have been unbelievably bad. 

    I realize that everyone who has dealt with pro audio gear has horror stories about every company under the sun, but NI is a mess. 

    • David De Garie-Lamanque

      like most big reputable companies, they probably think their products are “so good they don’t really need to invest in proper tech support”…they’d rather make awesome marketing videos…

    • Tyler Ballou

      I would agree. Fortunately, I’ve only had to contact them once; their products seem to run seamlessly for me.

  • Allan Oteyza

    i still love and cherish my arcade vc1 with dj tech tool mapping. i dont want to change!!

  • :'(

    Wow, a NI review that has pretty much no negatives about the product? What a surprise. Sorry DJTT, you’ve sold out. 

  • :'(

    Wow, a NI review that has pretty much no negatives about the product? What a surprise. Sorry DJTT, you’ve sold out. 

    • max

      gotta pay the bills man, you think they run this site for kicks?

      • Brononymous

        Uh… well… wasn’t that the idea?

    • 303bassline

      totally agree. Seriously DJTT, stop trying to write legitimate objective reviews on NI and its competitors products when it is blatantly obvious that NI pays you guys for the exposure and as a consultant. Plus the store portion of the site is essentially an NI shop front. 

      I once used to actually consider the reviews on this site to be pretty good, but shit has gone significantly downhill since the S4 was released and it has been an NI circle jerk ever since. I’ll be checking out other sources like digital dj tips for new kit. The legitimacy of DJTT reviews is done.

      • Spacecamp

        Sigh. We’re not getting paid by NI. 

        No one who works at DJTT wrote this review. 
        Please read the author biography in italics at the bottom of the article, Markkus is a very well respected writer with immaculate credibility. 

        • 303bassline

          At the end of the day I simply don’t believe you that DJTT and Ean doean’t get paid by NI. Secret product shoots prior to release. Input into new NI development. The majority of the items sold in the store are NI products. Come, the frick, on.

          My apologies to Markkus and I dont doubt his credibility. But writing an Ni product review for a subsidiary Ni website does not exactly fill me with confidence regarding objectivity nor does it entirely add anything to the authors credibility. Had Markkus written this review and posted it on a more objective gear review website on the net then it may have held more water. But an NI product review requested by DJTT from an external author is still a bit murky to me…

          • Spacecamp

            I suppose it’s your choice to not believe me. I wish I lived in the world that you imagine, because then I’d be driving a Rolls to the office every day. 

            Seriously, your argument doesn’t hold water. We receive all kinds of inside information on products from companies we have relationships with – take the recent VCI-400. 

            Us asking Markkus to write a gear review is, if anything, a sign that we are making strong efforts to reinforce our reputation as a credible gear review website. 

            I’m sorry that you really think we’re a shill of a site – we know that we’re pretty Traktor centric a lot of the time in our coverage, but we’re constantly striving to improve that. 

            Want to help? We’re looking for writers with great article ideas. Shoot me an email. Dan at DJtechtools.com. 

          • J.D. Cohen

            It is a bit weird seeing a site publish reviews for products which they sell. Realistically, people are going to wonder about impartiality in this situation, no matter how much integrity you actually have or how many precautions you take.

            As someone who has worked in the media, I know it sucks when people doubt you about that sort of thing when you know you’re on the level, but it’s an understandable thing for readers to be concerned about.

          • Ean Golden

            here is the bottom line. There are 2 ways to make money and grow a editorial web site. 

            #1- Advertising 

            #2- Sell gear. 

            I chose #2 because it would give us more money to invest in the website. Advertising barely pays anything and by selling some gear we can hire more writers and grow beyond a 1 person blog into a full on magazine online. 

            P.S. This is actually the more transparent model. What do you think happens when a regular blog with almost no money accepts cash from advertisers? THEY ARE NOW BEHOLDING TO THEM. The only difference is that you have no idea what the ties are because they are not transparent. With our model is obvious what we sell, and with that extra income stream I can afford to, and OFTEN DO, tell companies to go F&%$@ themselves. That includes NI as well. 

          • Futureglue Musik

            Respect!

            I really think comments are becoming more and more nasty on this site. Chill out people.

            I did not think this  review was too partial (BTW when was the last time you read a review that just trashed it). 

            It seems like as soon as something becomes successful, people just wanna hate. Like their underground secrete is not cool anymore cause the neighbour likes it too. pfft…

            Personally, I still enjoy this site and look forward to each Blog post and f8ck, what about all the great mappings and tuts we’ve had through the years? Like I said, respect!

          • Futureglue Musik

            Respect!

            I really think comments are becoming more and more nasty on this site. Chill out people.

            I did not think this  review was too partial (BTW when was the last time you read a review that just trashed it). 

            It seems like as soon as something becomes successful, people just wanna hate. Like their underground secrete is not cool anymore cause the neighbour likes it too. pfft…

            Personally, I still enjoy this site and look forward to each Blog post and f8ck, what about all the great mappings and tuts we’ve had through the years? Like I said, respect!

    • Metachemical

      “Still no EQ kill switches. No auxiliary line input or footswitch input. No MIDI I/O. Can’t switch from Group to Single effects modes with the hardware. Decks C and D are available only as Sample Decks. No hardware controls for the loop recorder or FX Units 3 & 4. No dedicated Filter knob. Limited control over the Sample Decks. No price break for licensed Traktor Pro users.” That dosen’t seem like no negatives to me.

    • Ean Golden

      I totally understand where you are coming from and why you would possibly see it this way but here is the bottom line. There are 2 ways to make money and grow a editorial web site like ours. 

      #1- Advertising 

      #2- Sell gear. 

      I chose #2 because it would give us more money to invest in the website. Advertising barely pays anything and by selling some gear we can hire more writers and grow beyond a 1 person blog into a full online magazine. 

      P.S. This is actually the more transparent model. What do you think happens when a regular blog with almost no money accepts cash from advertisers? THEY ARE NOW BEHOLDING TO THEM. 
      Write a bad review = no advert dollars = no milk for the kids 

      The only difference is that you have no idea what the ties are because they are not transparent. With our model is obvious what we sell, and with that extra income stream I can afford to, and OFTEN DO, tell companies to go to hell. That includes NI as well.

    • Ean Golden

      I totally understand where you are coming from and why you would possibly see it this way but here is the bottom line. There are 2 ways to make money and grow a editorial web site like ours. 

      #1- Advertising 

      #2- Sell gear. 

      I chose #2 because it would give us more money to invest in the website. Advertising barely pays anything and by selling some gear we can hire more writers and grow beyond a 1 person blog into a full online magazine. 

      P.S. This is actually the more transparent model. What do you think happens when a regular blog with almost no money accepts cash from advertisers? THEY ARE NOW BEHOLDING TO THEM. 
      Write a bad review = no advert dollars = no milk for the kids 

      The only difference is that you have no idea what the ties are because they are not transparent. With our model is obvious what we sell, and with that extra income stream I can afford to, and OFTEN DO, tell companies to go to hell. That includes NI as well.

    • Ean Golden

      I totally understand where you are coming from and why you would possibly see it this way but here is the bottom line. There are 2 ways to make money and grow a editorial web site like ours. 

      #1- Advertising 

      #2- Sell gear. 

      I chose #2 because it would give us more money to invest in the website. Advertising barely pays anything and by selling some gear we can hire more writers and grow beyond a 1 person blog into a full online magazine. 

      P.S. This is actually the more transparent model. What do you think happens when a regular blog with almost no money accepts cash from advertisers? THEY ARE NOW BEHOLDING TO THEM. 
      Write a bad review = no advert dollars = no milk for the kids 

      The only difference is that you have no idea what the ties are because they are not transparent. With our model is obvious what we sell, and with that extra income stream I can afford to, and OFTEN DO, tell companies to go to hell. That includes NI as well.

    • Ean Golden

      I totally understand where you are coming from and why you would possibly see it this way but here is the bottom line. There are 2 ways to make money and grow a editorial web site like ours. 

      #1- Advertising 

      #2- Sell gear. 

      I chose #2 because it would give us more money to invest in the website. Advertising barely pays anything and by selling some gear we can hire more writers and grow beyond a 1 person blog into a full online magazine. 

      P.S. This is actually the more transparent model. What do you think happens when a regular blog with almost no money accepts cash from advertisers? THEY ARE NOW BEHOLDING TO THEM. 
      Write a bad review = no advert dollars = no milk for the kids 

      The only difference is that you have no idea what the ties are because they are not transparent. With our model is obvious what we sell, and with that extra income stream I can afford to, and OFTEN DO, tell companies to go to hell. That includes NI as well.

    • Ean Golden

      I totally understand where you are coming from and why you would possibly see it this way but here is the bottom line. There are 2 ways to make money and grow a editorial web site like ours. 

      #1- Advertising 

      #2- Sell gear. 

      I chose #2 because it would give us more money to invest in the website. Advertising barely pays anything and by selling some gear we can hire more writers and grow beyond a 1 person blog into a full online magazine. 

      P.S. This is actually the more transparent model. What do you think happens when a regular blog with almost no money accepts cash from advertisers? THEY ARE NOW BEHOLDING TO THEM. 
      Write a bad review = no advert dollars = no milk for the kids 

      The only difference is that you have no idea what the ties are because they are not transparent. With our model is obvious what we sell, and with that extra income stream I can afford to, and OFTEN DO, tell companies to go to hell. That includes NI as well.

  • Yaroslav Sabitov

    My opinion, very expensive S2

  • Tony Estrada

    Wouldn’t it be awesome if they made a S2x version with EQ kills, loop number display (like S4), and AUX input as a stand alone mixer?  That would totally be my ideal controller.  I will cross my fingers for the new Denon DN-MC3000

  • DeltaLoko

    Ok, so heres a question(and I understand that this would end up equaling the price of an S4), but would an S2 + X1 more or less have all the functionality of the S4? Or is there something I am missing?

  • DeltaLoko

    Ok, so heres a question(and I understand that this would end up equaling the price of an S4), but would an S2 + X1 more or less have all the functionality of the S4? Or is there something I am missing?

  • Strategy

    Same price but added dedicated filter knobs + dedicated buttons for cuepoints 5-8 and this would have been my next purchase!! But as it is now = close, but no cigar!

  • Thewizard

    Restricting the controller to only two track decks is a deal breaker for me.

  • MrSteve81

    Think I’m going to stick with what I’ve got until the VCI400 is released and then I’ll have another think.

    Shorts and T-shirt by the way.

  • Anonymous

    EQ kill switches are kind of a dealbreaker 🙁 It’s too bad, it’s pretty cool looking.

  • Jzechmann

    Thank you Markkus for this review!

    I considered to buy the S2, but after reading your review I definitely changed my mind.

    I guess I gonna stick buy my current gear and wait for the VCI-400 to be released.

  • Dj Kizouk Kizouk

    i still think that the best controller made is the XONE 4D

  • PaulHolland DoubleDutchdj

    Badly want an S2 to fill the “all in one” controller void in my life, but there’s know way I’ll be buying for that price. Of course NI will argue it’s a great deal with Traktor Pro 2 included but like many others who fancy an S2, I already own a copy of the software. 

    It was different with the S4 as you was getting a 5/4 month early access to TP2 features exclusively with the S4 software.  A request to NI for some sort of deal for current TP2 owners doesn’t seem to un reasonable.

    Apart from 99% plastic construction my ultimate beef with the S2 is the tight ass marketing ploy of stream lining the filter pots, loop recorder controls and foot pedal input, considering it’s price would it of hurt them to of left these features? Of course as it leaves you with the thought of ” just an extra 200 and I can buy an S4″.  Shit like that is proper piss take, not only is taking the piss out of potential customers but it’s also holding back the controller from what it could, sorry, should be. It would be utter nonsense for NI to argue space saving when it’s clearly all about encouraging the train of thought towards the S4. 

    Yes of course you can re map these features, but the S2 should just be a 2 channel version of the S4, simple, though I can at least appreciate the lack of dedicated sample controls. 

    • Destrukto

      Yeah, VCI-400 a much better choice.

      • PaulHolland DoubleDutchdj

        The VCI 400 looks like an awesome controller, but a very different beast to the S2, I’m a turntablist so a controller really is a secondary dj set up for me, I need hi res skratch friendly jogs, take any where, chuck in a sensible sized bag sort of deal, hence I want an S2 as it ticks all those box’s very well.

        Maybe I’m reading in to things a little to much, but it seems NI have done quite a bit to make potential customers think “I might as well spend a tiny bit more and buy an S4”.  No audio output from decks C & D when in normal player mode is a bit of joke, no filter pots, no loop recorder controls, no foot pedal input, no loop size display, no preview. 

        Considering the length NI have gone to make you wanna just buy an S4 instead, it paints a grim picture for wether the NHL code would ever be shared with any manufacturer other than bloody Pioneer.  At the moment Traktor users have 3 choices when it comes to hi res code controllers and there all plastic, to big or lacking in desirable features.

        But still if they get the price right I’ll buy one in a heart beat, bastards!

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  • Freddy Hung

    well done… still waiting for the kill buttons on the S4 also..  any good mapping or idea from inside NI´s HQs? 

    • Jiggle Mac

      Hi, I recently bought an s2 and I love it! A few things are wrong in the review, decks c&d play perfectly through it, track decks, input or sample. You can remap the filter knob to one which doesn’t click, I never bought anything that did exactly what I wanted, I always adjust things to my liking. This site is awesome, great help, great mappings, tutorials, you name it, it’s great. I thought the review was against the s2 more than anything. I checked out most of the midi mixers in the store, the s2 felt the best. Quit hating. Almost every fault mentioned can easily be mapped to the controller. Eq kills, I’ve mapped them to the 4 hot cue’s, loop recorder there’s plenty of controls to do all you with it. It bugs me to read people being put off by incorrect information, by the way, all vestax stuff catches fire. Rant over

    • Jiggle Mac

      Hi, I recently bought an s2 and I love it! A few things are wrong in the review, decks c&d play perfectly through it, track decks, input or sample. You can remap the filter knob to one which doesn’t click, I never bought anything that did exactly what I wanted, I always adjust things to my liking. This site is awesome, great help, great mappings, tutorials, you name it, it’s great. I thought the review was against the s2 more than anything. I checked out most of the midi mixers in the store, the s2 felt the best. Quit hating. Almost every fault mentioned can easily be mapped to the controller. Eq kills, I’ve mapped them to the 4 hot cue’s, loop recorder there’s plenty of controls to do all you with it. It bugs me to read people being put off by incorrect information, by the way, all vestax stuff catches fire. Rant over

    • Zeba

      i had a denon DN-MC6000 and i have changed it for a NI Traktor Kontrol S2…
      all i have to say is that the Kontrol S2 is 100x way much better than the DN-MC6000. Ok its not a 4 channel mix but you have much pleasure with the jogwheels and the buttons are not so near each other (the dn-mc6000 is like pc keyboard 🙁 too many buttons grrrrrrr) … its a really great pleasure to mix with the S2. The Samples are easier to activate: with one clik you switch the sample on or off with the S2, but with the denon you have to press 3 button to do the same thing 🙁

      I really recommand this S2 !