 |
|
|
|
 |
Imu
Senior tranceaddict

Registered: Nov 2007
Location: London, England
|
|
|
| quote: | Originally posted by elFreak
new york is not far from CT.
ffs i know people from NH that would travel to Montreal and Boston for gigs...you have to chase them, "the scene is dead" is not an excuse if you want to play. |
that's very true...but since we're discussing college parties in this post, "the scene" refers to college parties lol
also, i agree that people should keep an open mind about music and don't. honestly, I have a pretty shitty time dj-ing college parties because i can't play what i want to. what's more frustrating is that most of the time when my set is technically brilliant, no one notices, and a lot of times i can play the worst set of my life, but as long as the songs are good people are like "omg wow that was amazing"...sometimes i wonder what the average person thinks a dj is doing behind the decks and the fancy equipment. A lot of ppl I talk to are like "I always think DJs just try to pose with their headphones"...which is kind of annoying
Either way, I think the best solution is to get plastered when dj-ing a set at college parties. It makes life less painful. And I used to get pretty annoyed when I got the "are u going to play something I can dance to?" comments...but if the girl's hot and u can get some out of it, then why not lol
|
|
Nov-18-2008 17:02
|
|
|
 |
 |
DarkMemoria
Supreme tranceaddict
Registered: Jul 2005
Location: Calgary
|
|
|
I think that most North American mainstream club DJs have encountered this problem...
its a bit of a confidence shaker the first few times you try to play all the house / trance you like, only to find an empty floor. Booze helps, but you eventually have to accept that you have to start somewhere, not everyone starts out playing to packed clubs / arenas playing the music they want with 2 min breakdowns.
I play mostly mainstream remixes (Britney, Rihanna, Pussycat Dolls, Katy Perry, etc), with a mix of house (usually more accessible stuff - i.e. Deadmau5, Kaskade, Morgan Page, but sometimes earlier in the night I dig a bit deeper / more progressive with 16BL, Eelke Kleijn, etc), and cheese (Put Your Hands Up, Calabria, World Hold On, Etc). I suppose it can be considered selling out to some degree, but you have to adapt when you have no EDM clubs in your city.
It helps if you don't absolutely hate what you're playing, broaden yourself to pop and eurodance a bit (i.e. September - Cry For You, more Radio 1 friendly stuff). I also work in another club where I literally just run videos off some silly program (VDJ... muchmusic style) - top 40, etc, and that one is much more brutal because I'm not allowed to -actually- mix, just MC and allow the program to auto-crossfade (read: trainwreck). Regardles, once you learn to accept that sometimes you just have to play mainstream, then you realize that DJing has great benefits like bar tabs, guestlists, and easy money 
Yes its really annoying when people come up and ask you to "play something thats not techno" ("hey man play some fucking SEAN PAUL or sumthing so I can get sum pussssssay"), but you'll realize its almost all guys that are coming up and asking you to play that stuff, girls usally can have a good time to house music, and once they hit the floor, the guys just follow.
It also feels great when people come up and compliment you for actually mixing instead of just running virtual DJ and slamming bad mainstream songs together, and you'd be suprised how many more house / EDM fans are actually out there.
Great thread that I'm sure many can relate to!
|
|
Nov-19-2008 15:21
|
|
|
 |
 |
quyntarious
tranceaddict in training
Registered: Nov 2008
Location:
|
|
|
I started DJing mostly for myself. And as a college DJ, I try to find ways to exposed people to electronica. I started playing house as a way to play something a little more dance friendly and now when I look for tracks I have three categories: Tracks I love, tracks my roommate would love and tracks that I think everyone would enjoy. I am usually right on about them for the most part. I haven't played any house out yet, but the people to whom I have showed my house mixes have all responded positively. I understand the role of a DJ, but I never became a DJ for those reasons. I became a DJ to do mixes that appealed to me. Of course the more I play out the more I am tempted to start playing more popular music. I never really did it for money, I did it because I want to share the music I love with everyone else.
- Quyn
|
|
Nov-19-2008 17:38
|
|
|
 |
 |
|  |
All times are GMT. The time now is 08:18.
Forum Rules:
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not edit your posts
|
HTML code is ON
vB code is ON
[IMG] code is ON
|
|
|
|
|
|
Contact Us - return to tranceaddict
Powered by: Trance Music & vBulletin Forums
Copyright ©2000-2026, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Privacy Statement / DMCA
|