How do you choose your music for the beginning when nobody’s at the party yet?
Hey guys,
Excuse me for the rookie question. Still just starting out in terms of gigs and got one of my first big ones coming up in two weeks. Just wondering, how do you choose your music for the beginning of the night when there are only few people at the party? I love all my music so much that I feel like I just want to save it all for when the party is jumping with tons of people. How do you choose the music for the beginning of the night, and still save all the sweet bangers for later?
I like to play songs that everyone knows, but it’s been a few years since they heard it. I try to start off slow and build up. I dj at clubs/ bars and usually for a general crowd so I def. cant start off with any dance music.
If your playing that early, you really shouldn’t be playing bangers unless your the only Dj that night. That, more than anything, will piss off the promoter and the later dj’s
Alright then. To answer your original question, start off slow with tracks at a lower bpm and then work your way up to the high energy, faster tracks (your bangers).
I generally will play some cool down tempo house as people stroll in. I’ll play tracks that I could never play prime time or when the place is half full. I try and play tracks that I want to hear (not peak time bangers) that I know will keep a nice vibe as people hit the bar.
Let say:
Hour 1 - 11PM - Deep house tracks, not a ton of vocals but groovy. Volume level around 50%
Hour 2 - 12AM - Happier songs with some vocals, great place for classic tunes. Volume Level 70%
Hour 3 - 1AM - Building it bigger to peak time, get a bit more aggressive. Play big songs but not the biggest tracks, you job as opener is to get the crowd hyped but not worn down. Use one or two of those really great classic tracks but not too many. Volume level 90% ( I always leave a little room for the main act, most of the time the club is paying $$$$$ for these guys and they need to shine.
In my opinion opening a room is harder than being prime time. You really need to read the crowd and get the going. In addition you can’t play all of the songs the headliner would because it would leave them flat. When I open I pick some great classic tracks along with some tracks people don’t know. This keeps the room just right, I’ve used this method to open for a ton of big name djs. Play it smart and they’ll keep you around. Show off too much and the big guns will complain.
I play stuff I like, or older top 40 stuff people haven’t heard. Also sometimes i’ll play a mix by girl talk or atrak till people start getting here then start playing stuff. Start off slow and work my way up to good songs I know people will like.