Providing atmoshpere vs. making people dance
Burns
2,227 Posts
Seems like my past three dj gigs I've had, have been providing ambiance/background noise at events, schitt is boring. I prefer to make people dance.
Comments
True, I guess if I was doing background for a vogue or vicki secret pre-party I wouldn't be crying.
I just started a loose type gig at a restaurant.
I dont expect folks to dance (dinner-related) but on a drunk and late evening anything could happen.
LOL!!! U know i try to pull out that extra cheesy shit during dinner.
Sneak in some Lawrence Hilton Jacobs and get funny looks.
There is no question getting a dance floor happening is where its at but a well paid ambience gig I would take everytime
What are you playing, where are you spinning?
vs ?
Dancin is cool, but i actually find it more challenging to play non-Dance shit and keep some sort of coherent style/flavor that folks enjoy vs tieing together 4/4 beats for 6 hours. Both have its merits, but setting a 'mood' has its rewards.
Yeah, I feel that. I guess I should open my mind a bit. I need the guapp.
Last night, I was DJing at the Redwood Bar and a bunch of 30-40 something white folks, celebrating a birthday, came into the backroom where I was spinning. At first, I feared Chad/Becky invasion but when they IDed a Meters song, I decided to throw on "Big Chief" upon which they all started going nuts and shouting "who dat!"
i prefer prepping for mood setting and it's more fun to tell a story that way
its more self gratifying to...like you hear your own private mindgarden afternoon
dancing has more ehilirating responses from the crowd but its also more pressure and sharper critique-vibes if you play a dud
yin and yang of DJing IMO
because you actually have to keep the flow moving even with ambiance
and you have to set the pre and post mood on the dancefloor
I had someone ask me to do it at a restaurant they run and i had to pass. Seems kinds