Dont get to play? Still get paid?
Dont get to play? Still get paid? Posted on: 04.08.2013 by Hosea Fokas If a venue books you in a closing position in a lineup, and the DJ before you kills the dancefloor to the point that the venue decides to shut down before you get to play. Should the venue still pay you? All? Just some? | |
Hosea Fokas 04.08.2013 | If a venue books you in a closing position in a lineup, and the DJ before you kills the dancefloor to the point that the venue decides to shut down before you get to play. Should the venue still pay you? All? Just some? |
Yong Aptekar 04.08.2013 | At the very least, you should ask for 50% before, and 50 after. That keeps you somewhat covered when this happens. I suspect it happens often. |
Lannie Kutay 04.08.2013 | its happened once or twice to me. if the promoter if a good guy, he will feel bad and pay you. If not, Just make sure your gettin free drinks, so If you don't play, just hang out and get ripped with the staff. lol |
Doreen Schurle 04.08.2013 | I'm one of those people who doesn't really give a shit about the money tbh; as long as I don't make a LOSS on a evening , it doesn't really bother me. I'd be more upset I didn't get to play than I didn't get paid. |
Hosea Fokas 04.08.2013 | Thanks guys. Its been a topic me and a few friends have batted back and forth on and wanted to see what the community said. We kinda agree with Bassline Brine in that you were booked for your time, skill, and service and if it is through no fault of your own, it's the right thing to do. But yes its not always the way it goes lol. |
Audrey Pinda 04.08.2013 | Roll the dice. It's based on the promoter, or if you're working directly with the venue, the manager. They SHOULD pay you either way. You were booked for your time, skill, and service and if it is through no fault of your own, it's the right thing to do. That being said, you're going to run into both good and bad promoters. It just comes with the territory. Contracts are all well and good once you are more established, but I've actually found that the use of contracts for everything is actually regionally based. Some areas you need a contract to do everything, other places won't book you and will just book someone else if a contract gets involved. It's not the right thing, it's just the truth. It's something that I'm sure is different in every country, and even the local regions of those places. I look at it like this: I go to every show asking myself two things; 1) What am I going to be playing on toevening (ie. will they actually have turntables, or will I have to use CDJ's) 2) Am I going to get paid toevening ? It depends a lot on the gigs you accept. |
Nancey Inderlied 04.08.2013 | If an event staff hires a DJ who kills the event to the point of shutting down, Im wouldn't exactly be optimistic about getting paid at all, let alone if I "didn't do anything." |
Joesph Kasian 04.08.2013 | See the 2 above answers - all my sets are contracted with an agreement that any issue that stops me playing within 2 weeks of the show they pay 50%, anything on the evening
its full fee. If its all word of mouth and verbal agreements you don't really have a leg to stand on. Unless your a name with big social media pull who can then go on to warn others of this promoter. |
Ulysses Vittetoe 04.08.2013 | This is where contracts come in handy. |
Latoria Kavulich 04.08.2013 | They pay you first, then its not an issue |
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