then they need to sold as a "live act" not a "DJ"
preprogrammed sets = fake DJ
then they need to sold as a "live act" not a "DJ"
preprogrammed sets = fake DJ
Weapons, not food, not homes, not shoes
Not need, just feed the war cannibal animal
if I pay to see you in two different places in a short period of time and I hear the same mix twice I am going to be disappointed and angry that I waisted my money. I come from an older school of thought I guess. I've seen heavy hitters multiple times in a month and I can say that I rarely heard a track repeated.
Never. I run out of time before I run out of tracks.
Weapons, not food, not homes, not shoes
Not need, just feed the war cannibal animal
I understand if a DJ is touring and he has effects and visuals attached to his set that the set is pretty much the same for every concert. I've read that sometimes its so high risk that even the sets are prerecorded so that the visuals and music sync up, and the DJ isn't doing much on stage. But these are concerts where you go to see the DJ perform.
But I was wondering about DJ's that have residencies at clubs/lounges, do they mix it up with fresh tracks every week or just play similar songs each week. I can understand there are patron requests to play whats popular, and maybe the DJ has favorites they like to play, but does it have to be completely different every time, or does it slowly evolve with each set.
And you call me an old frustrated DJ when I tell those Youngsters that collecting, searching and finding novelties was more difficult in pre-Internet Age???
![]()
![]()
![]()
Joke Beside I totally agree with you...Just Mastah Kyler just makes me wonder talking about Porter Robinson that way, I saw him @Marquee Las Vegas 2 years ago and I was surprised of his Show which was looking everything but pre-programmed.
I feel like this got slightly derailed...but for a residency in a club/lounge setting it's definitely important to mix up the tracks. It's okay to have a similar sound each week, because you want people to have an understanding of what to expect. If you're playing mellowed out house one week and people want that only to come next week to hear grimy dubstep, you'll lose any sort of sense of continuity.
If you want people to come out every week then your night should build an identity for itself. That way people can quickly tell others about it, can easily define and digest the idea of it.
It's probably okay to have a two-four tracks you play frequently. Some club nights/scenes were made with a few signature tunes. But you can't really force something like that. That needs to be organic.
Probably my fault for the derailment. It frustrates me when people defend preprogrammed sets because "lights". A good light guy goes a long way and can change and adapt to the music as it comes. The light guy at twilo was so legendary that Sasha and Digweed hired him for their Delta Heavy tour in the early 2000s. They also hauled around their own lights and sound all over north america.
This all started when the those three mooks got caught fake DJing and then went into damage control about how it was all about the synced up lights and pyrotechnics. gtfo.
Weapons, not food, not homes, not shoes
Not need, just feed the war cannibal animal
"my fault for derailment"
*continues to derail*
im just kidding friend. our views are different and thats okay. i work as a lighting designer and ive always wanted to design lights for a touring show of that caliber and personally i just think that the lighting effects are a thousand times smoother when pre arranged.
@Stephen Nawlins if you saw his 'Worlds' tour then most of that had a lot of pre planned elements. im not saying they hit one button for 1 song but they arent just freestyling either
and now to the topic lol theres a lot more things to take into consideration too. like i know that my local scene is infested of dub/trap heads. even though that chart said more people are playing house than any other genre, there are hardly any local house djs getting consistent bookings. also attend this club on other days of the week to see what other djs play. see what other people like or think is missing that you can add
take the gig and enjoy the experience. You never know what life brings to you.
some guy might love the tunes and hire you for his private yacht cocktail party. (pssst. no dance floor)
and here's a tune for you:
I'd say do it.
Clearly it will be a challenge to change your style and way of thinking about DJing for this type of crowd and venue, and the only way you can get better as a DJ is if you challenge yourself.
Also, you never know who will be in the venue. I've played gigs in bars and had another bar owner who just happened to be there ask if I could play at his venue.
|
Bookmarks