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| quote: | Originally posted by Stu Cox
Did it for several years. Easy(ish) money if you've already got all of the music, but some gigs can be a real pain - dickhead customers, having to lug all the gear away etc. But some are great fun and are made even better when someone crosses your palm with a few hundred quid at the end.
It's REALLY good for practice reading crowds and responding to what the crowds want. |
| quote: | Originally posted by djdk
what stu said. ive had some amazing mobile gigs and some absolute nightmares, plenty of stories tho haha.
The first 2 years of my djing career were spent doing mobile gigs and i reckonz the experience was invaluable not just in terms of crowd reading but dealing with shit (dickheads, faulty equipment, odd venues, flooding venues, fighting wedding guests and having to pull out an entire night of 70s music with 10 mins notice are just a few of the things i encountered). Yeah it can be very stressful but i'm fairly sure that im far more able to take problems i come across in clubs etc. now in my stride because of it |
+1
i also did mobile gigs for years, a great way to learn to read a crowd and how to deal with faulty gear on the fly
i did the weddings and school dances, moved on to big video dance productions with 2 24 foot video screens, 2 story lighting scaffolding and over 30,000 watts of sound, then when finally done with touring moved on to the club residencies
far too many stories and memories
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