What is it about this type of question that makes me irritated? Is it the fact that pure Serato DJ’s don’t respect where DJing came from? Is it the fact that someone else is getting paid for just being able to do simple, sloppy, compilation mixes? Is it the fact that the lack of basic turntable skills ruins the image of talented DJ’s to the general public? Yes, yes, and yes.
Sunday, February 28, 2010
DigiWack
What is it about this type of question that makes me irritated? Is it the fact that pure Serato DJ’s don’t respect where DJing came from? Is it the fact that someone else is getting paid for just being able to do simple, sloppy, compilation mixes? Is it the fact that the lack of basic turntable skills ruins the image of talented DJ’s to the general public? Yes, yes, and yes.
Saturday, February 13, 2010
The Definitions of Old and New School Hip-Hop
What comes to your mind when you look on a flyer and it says “Old School” music all night? Given the musical terrain and fan base of today, I’m saddened to think that in my mind, you might think of stuff from the late late 90’s. Paperboy’s Ditty or Puff Daddy's All About the Benjamins (yes, that was his name before Diddy) is not old school. By definition, "Old School" hip-hop ended around 1984 when Run DMC broke out into mainstream. Artists like Afrika Bambaataa, The Treacherous Three, Funky Four Plus One, Grandmaster Flash and the Furious Five, are true old school where rhymes were more party based and used relatively few syllables per bar of music.
"New School" hip-hop then covers everything from Public Enemy to Jay-Z to Lil’ Wayne, and most fans of hip-hop are familiar with this movement. This travels from political expression to ghetto stories to multi-syllable rhymes.
Friday, February 12, 2010
Formula DJ's from the Bay visit Seattle
Formula DJ's Boogie Brown and Neo Geo came to hang and spin with us at Joints & Jams this weekend. I met these cats on a much needed vacation down in San Francisco (thanks to my girl Michelle for such a wonderful bday gift!). These guys completely get what DJing is all about and continue to rock it. Much love for the hospitality and inspiration. Now it's our turn to pay them back in Sea-town! I don't know what they do in the Bay, but those damn Franette shots killed me (and Glenn, and Neo...haha). Nonetheless, they rocked the crowd and we had a blast! Glenn was definitely in rare form. I've never seen such a designated dancer...
Tuesday, February 9, 2010
DJ Etiquette - How to Treat a DJ
2. Unless you’re at a wedding, high school Homecoming, or karaoke bar, DO NOT ask for requests. We have things called “sets” where we previously pick a list of songs to play with very intricate transitions and mixing, so we’re not going to abandon that for your Top 40 Radio Song. Would you walk up to a band on stage and ask them to play “Single Ladies by Beyonce” all night? Nuff said.
3. No, I will not let you, your cousin, or your friend get on the turntables to DJ. That’s like me coming up to you at a traffic light asking, “Can I drive your car?” Your dude may be DMC World Champion, but I’m not getting some total stranger on my $3000 equipment.
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