From dj-claude
Restores a previously saved mix snapshot, reloading all layers and resuming playback. Lists available snapshots if no name is given.
How this skill is triggered — by the user, by Claude, or both
Slash command
/dj-claude:load [name][name]The summary Claude sees in its skill listing — used to decide when to auto-load this skill
Load a previously saved mix snapshot — restores all layers and resumes playback.
Load a previously saved mix snapshot — restores all layers and resumes playback.
The user wants to load a snapshot. Parse $ARGUMENTS for the snapshot name.
If no arguments were provided, call mcp__dj-claude__snapshot_list first to show available snapshots, then ask the user which one to load.
IMPORTANT: Use the MCP tools directly as mcp__dj-claude__snapshot_load and mcp__dj-claude__snapshot_list — do NOT use Bash or search for files.
mcp__dj-claude__snapshot_list to show options.mcp__dj-claude__snapshot_load with the name from $ARGUMENTS./dj-claude:load verse1/dj-claude:load chill-mixnpx claudepluginhub p-poss/dj-claude --plugin dj-claudeLists all saved mix snapshots with names, layer counts, and timestamps using the dj-claude MCP tool.
Produces precise, timestamped mix revision notes that mixers can implement without follow-up. Structured feedback with priorities, element names, and reference tracks.
Professional mixing methodology for audio engineering. Guides through pre-mix analysis, phase checking, gain staging, EQ decisions, compression selection, spatial processing, and automation. Encodes the decision-making process of a senior mix engineer backed by Phantom MCP measurement tools. Use this skill whenever the user wants to mix stems or tracks, balance a mix, make EQ or compression decisions, set up signal chains, choose compressor types, solve frequency conflicts between instruments, set up spatial processing (reverb, delay, panning), automate volume or effects, or compare their mix against a reference. Also use when the user mentions muddy mixes, harsh frequencies, buried vocals, kick/bass conflicts, or any mixing problem -- even if they don't say "mix" explicitly.