is funk a dead genre to dj?
Lumin
807 Posts
because they sure aint dancin in miami to it...if it doesnt have an 808, people aint feelin itis this true around the country?
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but she mentioned that folks cant dance to it. mind you, south beach folks are pretty closed minded when it comes to music at the club, and they arent the most cultured musically, but she had me thinkin though. i realize that the crowd age stays the same. thank god we have a bunch of older aged folks that remember the stuff we play. if it wasnt for that, i dont think i would be doin this type of night anymore.
but damn, i still like playin funk.
Dude this has been the case for a LONG time! Miami has to have the worst big city music scene in the US. Folks down here just want to Drink, Party & F%#k.
Footage:
Funk is that staple sound that all modern dance music is built off of. However, it doesn't always "work". You have to know your audience. Certain crowds are ok with hearing music they don't already know. Other crowds aren't ... so you have to pepper your sets with classic JB, Mary Jane Girls, etc. I don't think it's "dead", but you do have to find creative ways to present it.
But a full hour of St8 FUNK for kids who dont have any references (Hip Hop samples/Older Dj mentors/Funk Parents/etc) is a hard sell. In the mid 90's when I started Funk was fine(almost preferred), but by 2001 kids would ice grill me for playin Mandrill. Classic breakbeats is a nice gateway drug to harder funk, but still as the new 21 yearolds join the mix, the funk is droped from the mix. If U advertise as a st8 funk/soul/whatever night, well that's what's on your menu for the evening, but dont expect to get Becky on Sat to line up for your shit, cause she'd rather bring her Sexyback. Im Old.
i feel you duke about the point of reference deal. the shaft in africa theme has been gettin love, and of course, yall know why.
djing is not new to me, but i guess goin against the grain in the city can get a lil bit frustratin. im sure everyone who djs has been there.
Niche audience = Goofy white kids.
That??s me. Dancing the drunken robot to Spanky Wilson re-edits.
- J
PS: Not a reference to aforementioned place.
(aparently not Miami though. If I was partyin in Miami Id probably want to hear some freestyle shit too)
Seriously, for every person that asks me "when are you going to play something new?" when I play a funk 45, there's another one that tells me "the stuff you're playing is great man, I'm digging the tunes."
Sure the latter is usually a white dude in his late 20s/early 30s and the former is usually a girl of any ethnicity who looks barely old enough to drink.
But sometimes the opposite is the case. It's just up to you whether you want to put a little extra work into finding that audience.
oh, and btw, BAN for suggesting that funk is a dead genre. lol
who else?
Dante, as crowded as your Wednesday night sessions can be, I KNOW you ain't sayin' the Midwest is a bad place to deejay funk...
I have to say that THIS is not true in my city. Lots of people freak out to funk here, and it helps when you have the b-boys (and the few b-girls) out that night. Even an old ass brother(and sista!) will freak out to my sets, which of course, is the best compliment yet.
true
also, like someone else said, mixing it in is key... like even tho hip hop is not sample based as much anymore, classic samples do indeed work (at least in ny)...
also, even if you are doing a cornball becky infested gig, warming up with funk is always a good look...
I'm saying that the funk parties in the Midwest will never falter.
Two nights ago was the proof in the pudding.
No advertising, no hype, all good.
send me a list of ish you have for sale/trade!!!!!
its true
had many good experiences playing around my area
Yes. Sorry to the rest of the country if that wasn't clear.
and i dont really have much stuff for sale except what i am takin to the wmc record show. you goin?
Rod Blagojevich and maybe that furniture store with the records upstairs.