The DDM4000 mixer is jam-packed with creative tools, yet its intuitive layout lets you feel at home in an instant. Editing, storing, and recalling your settings with this Behringer mixer is simply a breeze! Hook up your turntables and CD/MP3 players to the DDM4000 pro mixer's 4 stereo channels, each with fully programmable EQ and Kill switches.
(64 Reviews)
Marcus AI
This mixer is great, I spin all genres of music and but my passion is drum n bass. I have used all kinds of mixers, i wanted the pioneer 800 but i couldn't spend more than $400. I've been using this mixer for the past 3 weeks, and I love it, wanna hear me use it live? Go to [..] - I spin LIVE every Friday night from 9pm - 10pm CST, video coming soon!! I go by 'Artificial Invasion.' Get this mixer!!
Tanner
Antares autotune efx vst crack mac. I have been DJing for about 4 years now, both for fun and for my job. The DJ industry is flooded with rumors that go along the lines of 'if it's not Pioneer, its crap..'. Well this mixer which costs a little over $400 gives the hailed DJM-700 and 800 a run for their money. I have used many mixers, and this mixer performs like mixers double, even triple its price. It has all optical faders, crisp and responsive LEDs, a built-in sampler, 3-band EQ, 2 mic inputs, and the effects unit alone in this mixer should run about $300. Its got XLR, RCA, 1/4, line & phono connections, and lots of them. I had 4 CDJ's connected to this mixer, and could have connected more! it even has a designated output for a subwoofer. Another awesome feature that mixers double its price dont even have is midi control. You can map every single button and knob on the mixer in VDJ, Traktor, Serato, you name it, and use it as a controller. AND this mixer comes with hardware for mounting it in a rack, club, or case, which is an extra $65 for Pioneer mixers. Bottom line: this mixer is a beast. However, although this mixer can compete with the big boy Pioneer and Allen & Heath mixers, the quality of it doesn't come close. My DJM-909 which I use for mobile jobs is small, 2-channel, yet weights 3 times more than the DDM-4000. while being light might seem like a plus, the DDM-4000 is composed of cheaper metal and lots of plastic while my DJM-909 is all metal, high-quality material. An issue is the knob stems are plastic; they should be metal. When you pick the DDM-4000 up, you can lift it with one hand and it rattles. Although my DDM-4000 took a beating in its case, don't be too rough with it, or it will break. All in all, its a fantastic mixer for the price. I dont see why smaller clubs and venues dont save money and have these installed in their DJ booths instead of older more expensive Pioneer models. It packs a serious punch and will outperform expensive mixers. Its one monster of a mixer,..just dont drop it.
Dante Nicastro
This mixer is everything that is described !! I reAally read up on this mixer before I baught it . I found that the mixer lived up to everything that was decribed. The mixer has a ton of functions , sounds great , and really feels great as well!! I was sceptical because the mixer offeed so much for the money , in the end I am very pleased ! The mixer sounds great! As a really huge suprise , the mixer is built well , it does not feel like a cheap mixer !! I am taken back that I got so much for the money and VERY VERY pleased with that!!!! I had read and also saw complaints on line about the 'BBRIGHT BLUE LIGHTS ' Which my does not have ,I HAVE GREEN LIGHTS , AND THERE NOT THAT BRIGHT.. Also People had said that ther was no 'ZERO POINT' in the EQ KNOBS IN THE MIDDLE', I dont know if this is the newer model or what .. So Far So Good . VERY PLEASED !!!!!!!!!! WOULD RECOMMEND THIS MIXER .
A. Koska
For the price, this mixer is unbeatable! I chose it based on numerous DJ recommendations, and I haven't been let down yet. Easy to read volume meter keeps me from peaking, decent effects built in. Lots of functionality. Highly recommended.
Amazon Customer
I've bought 3 of these in the past 3 years. They only seem to last a year then start shorting out. I only use it on Friday and Saturday nights for 4 hours at a time and like clockwork they break every January. When it works tho its totally worth it, but make sure you buy your 2 year warranty. I'm presently trying to redeem mine now.
Phil Boorman
I am a big fan of Behringer, but I have been massively let down by this mixer. The first one I received wouldn't boot up 3 times out of four, and when it did, it kept freezing, and the output levels would all jump to max. This was sent back, and I have today received a replacement, which is also faulty. Again, it only powers up after many attempts, and when it does, the lcd screen fades to non-visible. Also, with the ultramize feature enabled, if the output goes above 0db, the whole mixer freezes, but this time the output is silent. Really frustrating, as the features are great, but I could simply never trust one of these mixers at a live event.
dj cliff
It is a great mixer a lot of features the Mic inputs are good the only con to it is confusing with the set up of the features it is well worth the money I spent I do recommend it comparable to a high pioneer costing 3 x the money
/traktor-pro-video-dj.html. So, the new version of Traktor Pro has all the music mixing capabilities. Using this app, you can create sound capes with the help of betas. This application sanction you to plug and plays with the expert sound card.
Nicholas Bertao
I've used this mixer for over a year now and it's been good on me. Of course in the future I'm looking to upgrade to either a rane or a pioneer product but in the mean time my ddm4000 is awesome . I replaced the xfader with the x1 and now my cuts feel like butter. Also threw on some coolercaps on my faders and my crabs feel and sound perfect .I'd recommend this to the beginner / Ameteur Turntablist or mixing Dj any day! I've see a few of the reviews saying they got a few duds, but honestly yall just some how got unlucky cause mine is pushing its limits and doing perfectly fine.
Skoolboy
Received this mixer in amazing time, 2 days from order to doorstep with standard shipping. I'm a performance dj, doing multiple club events thru out the week as well as doing my own events during the month so I need a mixer that will take night after night of abuse. I've read where some people don't suggest this as a club install, but with optical faders on the channels and the ability to upgrade to optical on the crossfader for less than $60.00 this mixer can take a bit of abuse. One thing that grabbed at me is the ability to customize your outputs for pretty much any scenario. Having storable user presets is also good, when you have multiple dj's with different mixing styles, getting back to your settings is as easy as a few button pushes. Sound quality is amazing, no signal hum. My mixer has one flaw but I'm guessing that'll be sovled by upgrading the crossfader. Tracks are only cut out on the right side of the mixer, but I compensate for this by using the crossfader assign. Besides all this the mulitiple kills, effects, and ability to customize the the set up of the mixer and outputs make this well worth the money. Fader knobs, and eq knobs do feel a bit toyish but with all the features packed into the price the build of the mixer can be over looked, just don't abuse it too much. Mixer update..Aug 23 2011 So I've had this mixer for a little bit of time now, since I first purchased it I have upgraded the crossfader to the optical crossfader which was easy to install and is operating amazingly. New things I've found.Okay so I've done a bit of midi mapping it to tracktor using the center 2 channels as normal, the outer channel faders 1 and 4 are my pitch faders, and the eq kills on either side of the mixer are assigned as my cue, and play. I use the effects buttons for pitch nudge. You can play around with this as much as you want but I've found it flexible for mobile applications. As a club mixer this thing has been amazing. It's held up to night after night of abuse, and the ability to change your outputs thru the mixer has eliminated the need for my crossover in my rack unit, i still use compression and gating but its freed up a rack space so i put in a multiband graphic eq. All in all this mixer has performed well beyond what I had hoped it would and it pairs up great with any large format cd player..currently mine rests between two american audio radius 3000's. If you're in a crunch for cash but want something that will not only get you by but you'll be beyond satisfied with then this is the unit for you. Perfect performance, suprising durability and amazing sound.
Delroy B.
The output B/booth out/zone out of this product does not work efficiently. In addition the entire mixer goes into freeze and shuts down whenever you try to access the digital settings that you programmed into it. To avoid this each time I start up I have to do a re:program. Apart from these two faults the performance is great, this is a good buy if you are not in the Pro League.
In an ideal world, we’d be all over every single new product release with a team of eager review geeks hankering to lay paws upon the stream of shiny glittery boxes that are released with an unending frequency. Sadly that time is not upon us just yet, so I’m still posting things that should have raised their head a long time ago. One such piece of work is a review for Behringer’s DDM4000 mixer – a pretty unique product with a feature set that doesn’t match up with the previous offerings of the brand.
Yes I’m more than aware that this review is laughably late, but it’s been written with care and has been very well received by Behringer themselves. And seeing as it’s still in their product range, it seems only fair to give it some love. And that love has been dished out by DJ Pegasus, who has clearly gone some way beyond the usual level of reviewing and got into a lot of the finer detail of the mixer.
For the record, I fitted the Infinium upgrade to the DDM4000 and was delighted with the improvement in feel and scratchability. For the sake of £40, it’s an upgrade worth doing.
Behringer’s flagship DJ mixer is a bit intimidating when you first lay eyes on it because of its large number of buttons and multi-function display. But when you look closer, you see that it’s actually quite intuitively laid out for anyone that’s used a DJ mixer before. Behringer just added a bunch of additional controls and features wherever there was space, and when they ran out of that, they put more in the menus! It’s almost as if they combed DJ forums for every comment starting with “It would be cool if my mixer had…” and just added all of those little — but very handy — features. Little things add up to a lot, and a lot is what you get with the DDM4000. It comes with a standard cross-fader but an Infinium optical one is available. (My test unit had the Infinium.)
I was at first a bit put off by the lighter weight of the unit and the thinner sheet metal on the bottom (both compared to my Pioneer DJM-500,) wondering if that portended quality issues. I soon found out I had nothing to worry about, and had I thought for a second, it would have all made sense. You see, this is a fully digital mixer, so what the DJM-500 — over 15 years old now — required many bulky and power-hungry discrete analog components to accomplish, the DDM4000 can do in just a few chips (and only 20 Watts,) with many more features to boot. Welcome to 21st century electronics, Pegasus.