ever have one of those nights....
pjl2000xl
1,795 Posts
When you really have a horrible time djing? I did this gig tonight that for real i think i would be ahead of the game if i sat home and smoked pot. It was just terrible. I had to work with these poets and shit and then get my time cut short. I lugged about half my studio down under the impression that i would be spinning and jamming out on keys with a band all night, but hell no. I get stuck in some coffeshop with a bunch of art fags playing for maybe 20 minutes. It would have been one thing if they appreciated me there at least. No one even gave a fuck that i was even there except for the dude that was hosting it. And for real i was killing it. I was on my grizzly. Anyone else get gigs like this? The ones where you regret even leaving the house? at least im drunk as shit. Eases the pain.
Comments
2. the host liked you(alot of times i dj and nobody does)
3. dont bring all your stuff next time.
4. hope for the best and expect the worst.
5. realize you live in a free country where you can have all that stuff(most people do not)
6. it was a learning experience.
7. be grateful for your 20 minutes you had to express yourself.
and yes i have had literally hundreds of these nights and regret none.
peace, stein. . .
unless you are sasha and dickweed or "the rub" you ain't nobody[in spite of all your madd skillz ,dildo/gear and amazing records]
no one really cares about music as much as you[except us]
get over it or quit while you're hearing is still intact
8. get paid
9. get laid
This king of shit makes you better DJ more so than blowing up a backed club for five hours. The key to prevent this in the future is planning. ALWAYS talk to promoters in great detail. Get then to lay out a tight schedule especially if you are going on between a band, poets or other DJs. if they can't, it's big red flag and you should pass. It's one thing to show up with some records and not really get to play vs. hauling out your rig.
UNLESS, said shitty gig will get you paid on future gigs, or if you actually enjoy the bands and/or scene. Don't forget your business cards!
So if #1 on this list is "Rule #6," then where does that leave #6?
Oh well, the Moonglows' song "Ten Commandments Of Love" only mentioned nine of them if you listen closely, so it's all good...