First real gig; have some questions....
First real gig; have some questions.... Posted on: 30.09.2012 by Myles Hasken Hey guys, it's my first post here and I'm already asking for some advice.I've been DJing parties for about 2 years now; just your basic on and off campus college parties, a New Years Eve party, little things like that. I have produced a couple of my own tracks which got some decent responses. I've been honing my skills, experimenting with different stuff, and I feel like i'm ready for my first real bar/club gig. I emailed some places in my area asking if they had any openings or needed an opening or emergency guy. I have an interview with a place on Wednesday evening at 8, asking me to bring a CD of a mix of mine. Now this place is a pretty hot spot; State university up the street, big college scene. I frequent there every so often, I know the music they expect, I know the crowd. But I do have some questions about the setup they are going to be expecting from me. I have an HP Pavilion with Traktor Pro 2 mapped to my Numark Mixtrack. When I play parties, I usually just hook up their speakers directly to my laptop, and go from there. I don't have an amp. I don't have my own speakers. I'm assuming this will be alright? I can hopefully just plug into their system. I'm not sure how this really works. Thanks for your help in advance. | |
Myles Hasken 01.10.2012 |
Originally Posted by Shishdisma
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Myles Hasken 01.10.2012 |
Originally Posted by SirReal
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Myles Hasken 01.10.2012 |
Originally Posted by SirReal
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Louanne Andrix 01.10.2012 |
Originally Posted by Eliot Han
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Stanley Topoleski 01.10.2012 |
Originally Posted by Eliot Han
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Ciara Cuttill 02.10.2012 |
Originally Posted by calgarc
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Darlene Strohbeck 30.09.2012 |
Originally Posted by DJ Altercation
The bar I'm playing at this Friday has a house sound system, but no monitor, so I have to bring one speaker. On top of that I tried asking the owner what kind of connection I need to plug into house system, he said "Yeah you just plug into the house system"...So you have to know a little bit about pro audio, because you can't expect the owner to know. Basically, I have to go before Friday, so find out what they have, and how much space I have, because the only thing I have to act as a monitor is a powered 12 inch speaker. You always need to ask if you have to provide your own sound system, because that'll factor into your fee. |
Myles Hasken 30.09.2012 |
Originally Posted by elgi95
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Myles Hasken 30.09.2012 | Hey guys, it's my first post here and I'm already asking for some advice. I've been DJing parties for about 2 years now; just your basic on and off campus college parties, a New Years Eve party, little things like that. I have produced a couple of my own tracks which got some decent responses. I've been honing my skills, experimenting with different stuff, and I feel like i'm ready for my first real bar/club gig. I emailed some places in my area asking if they had any openings or needed an opening or emergency guy. I have an interview with a place on Wednesday evening at 8, asking me to bring a CD of a mix of mine. Now this place is a pretty hot spot; State university up the street, big college scene. I frequent there every so often, I know the music they expect, I know the crowd. But I do have some questions about the setup they are going to be expecting from me. I have an HP Pavilion with Traktor Pro 2 mapped to my Numark Mixtrack. When I play parties, I usually just hook up their speakers directly to my laptop, and go from there. I don't have an amp. I don't have my own speakers. I'm assuming this will be alright? I can hopefully just plug into their system. I'm not sure how this really works. Thanks for your help in advance. |
Nancey Inderlied 01.10.2012 | That being said, this is a really good time to assess yourself, and make sure you actually do have the ability to perform! |
Myles Hasken 01.10.2012 |
Originally Posted by Shishdisma
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Nancey Inderlied 01.10.2012 | If you're not confident in your ability to do the gig, don't do the gig. If you're confident in your ability, do the gig. It's been two years, unless you've been mixing to the completely oblivious, you know what you're doing, just do that. It's a small club in a college town, you could most likely play a Deadmau5 album on repeat all evening
and nobody would believe twice. Just don't do anything you aren't confident in doing, and you'll be fine, if you start improvising, and trying things you aren't comfortable with, that's when smooth mixes become messes. |
Myles Hasken 01.10.2012 |
Originally Posted by SirReal
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Antonetta Wikel 01.10.2012 | I'd suggest that if nerves are the issue, you start with a 2 or 3 track selection that you are so comfortable with you could mix it blindfolded, that gets you comfortable with the room, booth & crowd. Then you can freewheel it as you see fit. I bet the GM won't get a damn as long as the peeps are buying drinks. |
Myles Hasken 01.10.2012 |
Originally Posted by SirReal
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Antonetta Wikel 01.10.2012 | You should only play a pre-recorded mix if you have to take a particularly long dump. |
Myles Hasken 01.10.2012 | Thanks for all the replies guys, it really helped. Another question I have, and take into consideration i'm new to this. I gave the general manager a CD of about an hour mix of my stuff and what I believe the crowed there is going to respond to. That being said; should I rely strictly off of mixing everything live when the day comes, or pre-record my mix and go off of that? |
Louanne Andrix 01.10.2012 |
Originally Posted by Eliot Han
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Stanley Topoleski 01.10.2012 |
Originally Posted by Eliot Han
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Ciara Cuttill 02.10.2012 |
Originally Posted by calgarc
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Stanley Topoleski 01.10.2012 | Bring plenty of cables and label them so you do not loose them. Make sure you show up early as well |
Shonda Soulier 30.09.2012 | First of all, I completely agree with Bassline Brine--you should go grab an Audio 2 DJ. Aside from quality it will improve your latency AND allow you to monitor in your headphones. You'll wonder how you ever lived without it. Now then, without knowing their setup it's going to be hard for us to give good advice, right? So you need to tell us a little more Do they have a DJ booth with a house setup? If so it will probably be as easy as plugging into channel A of their mixer and playing your set through that. You can use the cable below, it's an 8th inch to RCA Y Cable, they sell them at Radio Shack for under $10. If there's no house setup you'll need to find out how they do things and report back to us. First thing's first...make your best 60-minute mix of good bar music. And at the interview, take tons of notes. But, don't commit to anything you're not prepared to do. |
Audrey Pinda 30.09.2012 | Most places will have a sound guy. Be it someone just working the specific evening
, or someone who is there on a regular basis. But it's not a bad idea to go down there ahead of time (a evening
or two early) and talk with them, and check out their system. Most of the time you'll just be plugging your setup into an open channel on a club's mixer. Which, if you are using the headphone out, is probably going to be using a 1/8" to RCA cable. (RCA end going into the mixer, the headphone jack into your setup). Honestly if you are going to be playing out, it's probably not a bad idea to invest into an external soundcard like the Audio 2 DJ. It's worth every penny to get the best sound, and it's going to be leagues above the sound quality of your internal audio interface. The same kind of setup procedure works though, though you'd probably just need a 1/4 to RCA cable I believe. |
Terrell Allende 30.09.2012 | Ask what kind of setup they have most clubs will have their own setup and you just plug in your laptop and your set to go |
Darlene Strohbeck 30.09.2012 |
Originally Posted by DJ Altercation
The bar I'm playing at this Friday has a house sound system, but no monitor, so I have to bring one speaker. On top of that I tried asking the owner what kind of connection I need to plug into house system, he said "Yeah you just plug into the house system"...So you have to know a little bit about pro audio, because you can't expect the owner to know. Basically, I have to go before Friday, so find out what they have, and how much space I have, because the only thing I have to act as a monitor is a powered 12 inch speaker. You always need to ask if you have to provide your own sound system, because that'll factor into your fee. |
Myles Hasken 30.09.2012 |
Originally Posted by elgi95
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Terrell Allende 30.09.2012 | Usually from what I've heard you just plug in your laptop with a serato box or what ever software your using. |
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