really??? ... bangs head

really??? … bangs head

original article can be found wired .com…

NEW YORK – Yesterday it was jukeboxes. Today, it’s the iPod.
An upscale New York nightclub has set up a unique DJ booth complete with a pair of iPods. The catch – Patrons are invited to be the DJs.
The club is called Apt. (pronounced A-P-T), a trendy lounge in Manhattan’s meat packing district decorated to resemble a tony New York apartment. Housed in an anonymous warehouse at 419 West 13th St., the bar thrives on obscurity. There is no sign outside and no website.
Next to the dark wood bar is the DJ table. The setup revolves around a standard mixer, which allows the DJ to fade between two music sources. But instead of the two standard turntables, a pair of iPods have been substituted.
One is a 5-GB model containing about 1,000 songs, the other a 10-GB model with 2,000 songs. Connected by headphone jacks, the iPods sit on Plexiglass blocks, one on each side of the mixer.
Would-be DJs take a numbered ticket from a deli-style dispenser next to the DJ desk. A stack of printouts of all 3,000 songs are available to help DJs prepare their set list. The printout also provides a quick guide to DJ etiquette, including the rule, “Playing of any heavy metal ballads will result in immediate expulsion from the premises.”
With 3,000 songs to choose from, patrons play everything from Black Sabbath to Basement Jaxx.
Everyone gets seven minutes to play a set; the time is counted down on a giant digital clock placed in front of the mixer.
Matt Maland, 27, a part-time DJ, has even figured out how to make the iPods scratch. By hitting the center button twice in quick succession, the music backs up a fraction.
“It’s not really scratching,” he said. “It’s a phony effect. People don’t throw their hands in the air, but it’s amusing I guess.”
Maland has played at Apt. three or four times recently. “It’s fun,” he said. “It’s different. It’s a challenge. You have to think what songs go together more than vinyl because you can’t beat-match.”
Maland said he hadn’t come across a similar setup anywhere else in New York. “It’s funny because it’s kind of an obvious idea,” he said.
The iPod DJ setup has been operating for just over one month, and provides hours of boozy, gregarious fun. Half the bar crowds around the mixing desk, offering advice or criticism or just dancing away.
“It’s pretty easy,” said Sai Blount, the lounge’s music promoter, who spends most evenings manning the setup, patiently helping people. “We made the whole mixing thing pretty simple for them.”
Blount said iPod DJing has become a major attraction. The fun starts at 9:30 and runs until 3 or 4 a.m., every night of the week.

i kno its an old article … but really?

:sunglasses:

grrrrr

Wait 'till the music associations catch wind of this?

theres gonna be hell to pay!

Meh, it’s the meatpacking district. Douchebags hangout there

There is no truer statement than this. I feel dirty anytime i go near that area.

why’s it called the ‘meatpacking’ district?

LOL, talk about skimping on the DJ.

I ran into one of those ipod DJs at a party last night. It was not cool in any way.

i was going to say its stupid

but the article is from 2002, so this was a great idea at the time

A long time ago things were actually made in Manhattan besides hipsters, douchebags and really awful hip hop.

There were meatpacking plants in that neighborhood.

Now it has been converted to a place where rich douchebags go to get laid. I don’t trust anyone who spends more on their shoes than I made in a week.

bitter much…? :stuck_out_tongue:

n’ah, agree with the last bit tbh…

I know what you mean…

BUT

Thou shalt not judge! :smiley:

Like all the CDJ and Turntable DJ’s that call digital Dj’s phony’s… (they will come around when clubs start ditching their gear and start inviting us in (more) with open arms)

You don’t have to judge, but I will. Hell, Digital DJing may look like an unskilled craft, but you still have to know the basics.

it’s just a club gimmick to get people through the doors, i doubt any of them take djing seriously.

that’s like professional singers getting butthurt about karaoke nights… naw mean?

good point

[quote=““Matt Maland, 27, a part-time DJ””]
You have to think what songs go together more than vinyl because you can’t beat-match.
[/quote]

Part-time DJ, full time fool. :sunglasses:

This, and who cares. If we bitched about every bar or club that didn’t didn’t have a real DJ we would do nothing but bitch.

That’s why God invented the cross fader slam. :slight_smile:

anyway, APT has consistently had some of the best ongoing dj parties for something like 10 years.