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bachatu
A Trance Of Thought

Registered: May 2001
Location: South Florida
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it depends on a couple of things. If you do a couple of shows here and there, you will want to charge more than usual if you are providing all equipment (loud speakers, mixer, tts, etc). How long if the night gonna be. 4 hrs or 10 hrs? Take all that into to consideration. Are you gonna mix from song to song, then make sure you can mix well enough. If you are just playing tracks in random, like a jukebox, then dont worry.
Either way, i wouldnt charge any less than $50, even if you may not have much experience.
Then again, you may want to do some free shows, as long as you aint providing equipment, to promote yourself and to get some experience. It doesnt hurt.
If you are providing eqiupment and setting everything up, you would charge $200+ for the whole night.
Also, see what your competition is. If you have tons of competition, you may need to be a bit competative with prices. What i mentioned above is pretty competative. Especially if you do it for free :P
In the beginning, i woulnt worry about money, you cant really depend on that... best thing to do is get some experience playing out. From there, if you want start charging and upping prices, then be creative and offer things that your competition normally wont offer.
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Sep-20-2003 04:39
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brian
vinyl junkie

Registered: Sep 2002
Location: Addison, TX
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Re: Re: Question on how much to charge
| quote: | Originally posted by Vlad
LEARN TO CRAWL BEFORE YOU CAN WALK!
Take it easy kiddo, I understand your ambitious to start making cash... how about you learn to mix first and get good at it, than start putting a price on your skills. |
Good advice. I bought my first TT last November (SL-1200MK2), my mixer in January (DJM-500), and my second TT in April (SL-1210M3D). I've been practicing on my beat matching for about a year now, and I've actually been using vinyl exclusively since April--so for a total of about 5 months now. I've gotten pretty good with beat matching, and occasionally have my off-days like everyone else. But either way I still don't think I'd be ready to play anywhere too big yet -- maybe a small party or something, but certainly not a club.
And it's not that I have no confidence. I have plenty. But even after doing this for as long as I have, there are a lot more things I have to learn. I can positively say I'll be ready in the next few months.
All in all, hold off for a few months. Develop a feel for it and practice a LOT. Once you get your equipment, you will most likely feel differently about how ready you are to play live. There's really no checklist that will tell you when you are ready to play live -- when you're ready, you'll just know it and will feel it. Become a god at beatmatching first, start stocking up on vinyls, and stay current with the music scene. Just don't overwhelm yourself in the beginning, because if you do, chances are you may end up hating it because of the rough start.
I'm not trying to burst your bubble or put you down or anything. I'm glad to see someone at your age so interested in DJing on real equipment. But just take it one day at a time, and never give up 
Good luck mate, and enjoy the ride 
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Sep-20-2003 06:52
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Vizay
immiNspired

Registered: Dec 2001
Location: Stockholm & in my mind
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well I can only give you advice from my own experiences 
I've been mixing for a little over a year now and I've been standing most of the time in my bedroom practicing, why you might ask, well simply because the fact that if people hire you and they think you suck you will NOT be hired again...
beeing a DJ and making money on it is so much more then just mixing the music and getting payed, if you aint got a good reputation then no one will want you before that other guy they know more about...get me? 
as for myself, I've played on 2 real parties (with aprox 100 people in the crowd) and both times were for free, I might have like 1 or 2 more gigs comming up this year and both will probably be for free, why you might ask...well simply because I know my mixingskills are enough to be called good but no one knows who I am right now so I have to build a reputation, and the easiest way is to play for free and show them how good you are (if you play for free the chance is way bigger that someone will hire ya then if you take a fee of 50$, after all no one wants to take a risk on a kid they know nothing about)
so in short, my advice is wait untill you get your TT's, mix at home for at least 6 months (you will probably need more time, learning takes time )
when you think you've got skills enough you can start considering playing out 
___________________
| quote: | Originally posted by davedresden
i suggest getting the gabriel & dresden prog-a-minute. in 3 easy steps you too could change the face of dance music.
batteries not included.
- dave |
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Sep-20-2003 08:10
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Kamikaze Badger
Suspended User
Registered: Sep 2003
Location: Guttenberg, Iowa, USA
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I know, and my plans are to just DJ at my school for the rest of this year and the next for free, and then when i get more experience and a good rep, then ill start putting a price on my skills. My previous plans were to just do all of this as a hobby and not put a price on any of my stuff, but after seeing the cost of vinyls, and been told by the pros here, i guess that i do need to charge money. Ack, g2g, not supposed to be using the computer right now.
___________________
Signature Suspended Because It Was Too Big.
No it wasn't...
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Sep-20-2003 14:31
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