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Things People Say To DJs

Things People Say To DJs

People say some funny things to DJs when it comes to attempting to persuade you to play music that is not in the style of what you’re currently playing and/or doesn’t go with the theme of the night.

Most of these people don’t understand that you aren’t meant to be a jukebox, or an extension of what they were bumpin’ in their car on the way over.

A DJ’s job is to read the overall crowd and find a happy medium between what they want & what you have to offer. You are creating a journey that usually starts off as background music and slowly gets in their veins as the alcohol begins to kick in. You are creating a soundtrack for the night & although you are flexible, the last thing you want to do is get derailed from the vibe you’ve been building to play a request that doesn’t have anything in common with this theme.

Imagine how terrible some movies would be if the audience got to pick the playlist for the movie’s soundtrack. Imagine people bombarding the film booth with off the wall requests during the movie. I can respectfully say that Beyonce would completely ruin the flow of Donnie Darko.

So as we continue with this parallel between a DJ set and a movie soundtrack, lets discuss & translate some common things people say to DJs that attempt to derail us from the story we are telling through our track selection.

“What kinda stuff do you play?”
Translation: “The radio station I listen to does not play any of the music you have played & since I only own 10 CD’s and listen to 1 radio station I don’t have the depth or patience to be educated by you. Please play that one popular song that you would prefer to stab yourself in the eye than play”.
Now this statement might be ok if you haven’t started playing music, but when you are 2-3 hours into your set and they can’t figure out what kind of music you play (or read the sign outside that displays the musical styles that will be played), there is a problem with this person. Unfortunately, this problem seems to be a common one.

“Is THIS all you’re gonna play tonite?”
Translation: See above
I’ve gotten this response when I was only on my 2nd or 3rd song or after several hours of playing every style of music except what they are in to.

“Can you play something we can dance to?”
Translation: “I just learned how to dougie, so I must only hear songs that I can dougie to. I plan to dougie all night even though your club has an 80′s theme.”
No, obviously I can’t. You seem to think that only 1 style of music is danceable & I have clearly missed the mark on finding that one style that satisfies you.
I’ve heard this playing Michael Jackson & if that doesn’t make your body move, you’re body must be dead.

“Change the beat up, you’re just playing the same song”
Translation: ” I don’t understand what a DJ does. I don’t get that a DJ finds common themes through multiple styles of music & finds a way to seamlessly patch them together. ”

“Yo dog….”
Translation: “Please play a song that will lower the intelligence of the room by at least 80% & make you want to commit Hari Kari on yourself.”
Ok, we can stop right there. we all know what is coming next, so we can pretty much ignore the rest.

“……… up in here”
Translation: see above
Sorry, if you end any statement with “up in here”, I’m not gonna play it. It doesn’t matter what the request is, it’s going to be awful.”

“Are you just gonna play Techno all nite?”
Translation: “I only listen to top 40 music and every other style in the history of man will be collected and filed under Techno.”
Look, this might be a legit question if I was actually playing techno all nite, but then again, if that was the case, you would probably be at the wrong club to make any requests that would satisfy you.  I’ve heard this question asked to me when I was playing 80′s, indie, electro, house, downtempo, breaks, Funk, old school & disco. If you can’t distinguish all of these styles from Techno, you don’t belong in my club.

“Hey man, you’re doing great & I love what your doing but I got this girl…..”
Translation: “I do not like what you are playing & I am using the girl I showed up with as an excuse to try to get you to play music you would rather send to the depths of Mordor to suffer a slow painful death.”

“Play something I can shake my ass to.”
Translation: “I’m afraid a guy won’t take me out behind a dumpster for some hot love making if he doesn’t see me dance like an idiot to that one song on the radio tonite. ”
This is similar to the whole “something I can dance to” statement. Nobody is stopping you from shaking your ass, and you don’t need a soundtrack to this ass shaking you so desperately want to partake in. There have been many types of ass shaking through the ages to many styles of music, so just what type of ass shaking are you talking about? Do you only know 1 way to shake your ass? Is your ass deficient of all other forms of shaking?

“Can you play my song next? We’re gonna leave.”
Translation: “I don’t respect what you do enough to have even tried to be entertained all night but I expect it will be no problem for you to play my song next so we can stink this place up even more before we exit.”
Leaving so soon? But without you, where will I find my inspiration? Please let me honor your presence and contribution to this magical night by sending you off with the 1 song before you leave that will absolutely kill the vibe I’ve spent hours building. Oh and thanks for not tipping. My parents are wealthy & I just play music for fun.
* oh & if you do tip me to play a bad song, tip well because playing your song is probably going to ruin the rest of my nite.

“It’s my friends birthday &….”
Translation: “Can you please play 50 Cent or an equally overplayed song that has nothing to do with the genre you were hired to play here tonite?”
Ok, now I’ll be fair. I know people want to feel special on their birthday & hear that one song that will make them remember their night. I get that. Sometimes I have even got… wait for it….. a GOOD request. Most of the time however, the request is a buzz kill. I tend to opt for target=”_blank”>This song, instead of the obvious 50 cent tune if they want a song that actually says “Birthday”.

“Hey, I’m a DJ too, can I spin?”
Translation: “I think I know better than you how you should run your night & I have no problem showing you the disrespect of asking you to stop doing your job so I can show you my skills.”

No dude, you can’t. I don’t know you and I don’t trust you with my equipment. Also it’s obvious that as a DJ yourself, you haven’t learned any thing about DJ etiquette. As a DJ, I respect what the DJ is attempting to do during his set. I am hoping to be taken into unexpected territory and possibly even learn something during the night. I don’t have a list of songs I need to hear when I step into a place. I am more interested in his/her vibe. I’m either feeling it or I’m not. In neither situation am I going to ask that he step away from the decks so I can “show him how it’s done”. That’s why I got my own gig!  If I am not feeling the music, I will go somewhere else. I am not going to force the club to be subjected to what I think the DJ should be playing. Not Cool.

I hope this has cleared up some of the common things people say to DJs & allow you to easily translate it to the true meaning behind the statements. If you have been accosted by these type when you are DJing and still made it through the nite without hanging yourself, I honor you. If you are trying to open people’s minds to new sounds instead of offering up the musical junk food that so many other DJs seem to serve, I salute you. You are art in motion & you are what pushes us all forward.

Happy Music Mixing,

Jason

P.S. – Don’t forget to comment & tweet (down below) & “like” (up above).All your feedback & support is appreciated!

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One Response to “Things People Say To DJs”

  1. January 20th, 2012 at 11:04 am

    Looking back, Looking forward | Music Software Training and Ableton Tutorial Videos says:

    [...] Things People Say to DJ’s [...]

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