Discussion on How Many Forum Members Are Or Were Disco DJs? within the Disco Music of the 70s and 80s forums, part of the General Music Discussions at DiscoMusic.com category; If any forum members are or were Disco DJs please respond and tell me what clubs along with dates you ...
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#1
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| If any forum members are or were Disco DJs please respond and tell me what clubs along with dates you worked at and any other tidbits. ONLY RESPOND IF YOU ARE OR WERE A BONAFIDE CLUB DJ!!! Thanks you!
__________________ Bernie ================================ |
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#2
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| Back in the days, I was a resident @ the Brooklyn Warehouse & Smalls Paradise in Harlem. Remember those Mobile DJ days, when you would bring two speakers, an amp, mixer, two turntables (Quanta 500), a fan and a microphone to rock the house. Oh, how things have changed?
__________________ Keep the faith and everything will come your way as time marches on! |
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#3
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| Just had a weird one. I had to look up the date I started at the Hacienda in Manchester for an interview someone's doing with me. Would you believe Saturday August 13th 1983, exactly 20 years ago to the day. Time flies! Now I've just come here and seen this thread. Very strange! Anyway, here goes: The Hacienda is the most famous club I worked in (I was the first dance resident, it was very much an alternative venue back in those days), but the best clubs were Legend in Manchester and Wigan Pier, where the Electro-Funk scene took root and I played to a mainly black (and highly knowledgeable) audience. Quick rundown: 1975 - started deejaying professionally, first residency was the Chelsea Reach in my hometown of New Brighton. 76 -80 - The Golden Guinea in New Brighton - this was my home from home back then, and where I made my name locally. I also worked in other clubs in the area but this was where my heart was. 78 - I was away for a few months deejaying in Denmark and Norway before returning to the Guinea. 80 - back to Europe to work in Denmark and Germany before landing the residency at Wigan Pier, an American styled disco in the UK (with a sound and lighting system second to none in this country). 81 - took over Wednesday Jazz-Funk night at Legend in Manchester (I already did a successful Tuesday Jazz-Funk night in the Pier - Legend was owned by the same company, another amazing venue). 82 - gave up Pier residency (but kept Tuesday and, of course, Wednesday at Legend) to concentrate purely on black music (including Electro-Funk, which was just emerging). Worked at other clubs during the next couple of years in areas like Huddersfield, Manchester, Liverpool and Bolton, and was also a fixture on the All-Dayer scene in the North and Midlands (events in places like Preston, Manchester, Nottingham, Birmingham, Sheffield, Leeds, Derby etc) Aug 83 - Started Friday Funk night at Hacienda - also played Legend type tunes for an hour every Saturday. 1984 - retired from deejaying professionally. |
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#4
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| Hi Bernie, I started DJing in the fall of 1980. I became the friday night jock at a club that I was dancing at. I was bringing records to the friday night jock to play because he wasn't getting to the new stuff quickly.... but overall, he was the best of the 2 jocks they had... The name of the club was Stratus. The club brought in approximately 500 guests with ages ranging from 18-23. This was the hottest spot in the east county. The owners of the club ran a recording studio above the club in a seperate room. They used to make their own custom commercials and had an awesome relationship with the local radio station. Between 1980-86, I must have only missed 8 times. I did double duty for a short while after the Saturday night jock was ready to call it quits. During the early part of '83, the mod scene was starting to get in full gear here in the states. The owner decided to make Saturday night dedicated to this group of young kids... This new jock played groups like "Tin Tin, Cure, Dead Or Alive, etc. etc." ... It was time for me to move on during the early part of '86. I decided to give this concert/club promoter a try. I worked one particular club that was red hot for about 1 1/2 years. I worked several other shows for him on other nights at so many various clubs that I can't remember all the names. But it didn't matter where he promoted, he always had the crowd follow him. I've worked along side many many jocks (from radio stations) cross promoting with him, I'd be the jock, they'd so the voice overs... We had some special guests. I met Howard Hewitt & Miki Howard (elektra records) at the clubs... I gave up working in clubs in 1988. I think I needed a break from it all. Cafe Vid , was the common club I played at after I left Stratus... :D |
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#5
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| Hey Boss, Don't forget about me! :lol: :lol: You can check out your interview for the dates and places cause I can barely remember last week. :( :D |
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#6
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| Hey, I spun disco at the dances at our small college. We had hundreds there at the dances, and it's how I met my wife. (Both Disco lovers.) If I was old enough at the time, I would have spun in the 70's. as it was, I just listened to my radio all night. They charged money to the townspeople, so I guess you could call it a club. In heart, it was a club :) We've spun a few club nights since then, and plan to get it banging again when we move closer to a real city! |
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#7
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| Started spinning Nov 1974 at THE D. O. K. WEST in Garden Grove Calif. (Orange County) Went over to NEWPORT STATION July 1976 in Costa Mesa Calif. (Orange County) Was one of the founding members of SCDDJA (one of the first record pools) Worked at the Motherlode in West Hollywood Oct 1979 to May 1981 Then Oil Can Harry's in Studio City 1984 to 1994. I attended the Billboard Disco Convention here in LA in Feb 1980 I was profiled as a DJ in a Billboard Disco Special Issue in the 70's |
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#8
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| I guest DJ'd at the River Club and Alex in Wonderland during the 1982-1984 period. I also shared DJ duties with NickNack during some of those special "tea dances" at Sneakers.
__________________ The Pounding Drums, The Flashing Lights... |
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#9
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| Hm,... lets see if this qualifies as bonafide... if not please delete Some overlaps but i'll try to remember some '77-'81 Small disco/bar "Cosmopoliet" ~200 people Played Soul/Disco/Top40, most memorable tracks : Jean Knight - Mr Bigstuff Supremes - Baby love Joe Simon - Step by step All Donna Summer, EWF, Tavares, Trammps, Barry White tracks Started buying imports around summer of '78, and try to get people to dance to them :roll: '81-'02 Multi disco venue "Lunenburg" ~2500 people Played Disco/Rock/Dance, most memorable tracks : Forecast - Happy days The Smiths - Bigmouth strikes again Softcell - Tainted love Harlow - Take Off All Patrick Cowley tracks '82-'89 Disco "La Cortical" ~500 people Played Funk/Disco/Dance This was the first gig where mixing was the rule, we played mostly imports and new dance stuff. :lol: Most memorable tracks : Colonel Abrams - Trapped First Choice - Let no man Shannon - Let the music play Farley Jackmaster Funk - Love can't turn around Starpoint, Peter Brown, Gino Soccio, Total contrast, etc. '93-'98 Disco/Danceclassics parties at "Jayselings Royal Palace" a large party venue ~400-3500 people Played all danceable old and new "old" tracks. '95-'96 disco "Rockefeller plaza" ~1100 people Played Dance/House Most memorable tracks : All Faithless, Masters at Work, Tom Wilson - Techno Cat '97-'01 venue "Time Out" ~1800-2500 people Played Rock/House, no memorable tracks.. :( Add ~500 gigs with drive inn disco (mostly ~1000-1500 people) playing anything that you can imagine :roll: Currently i play as a substitute in a few places at irregular intrevals playing Dance/House/R&B or Rock Why do people like System of a down, Dropkick Murphy's or Spineshank :roll: :evil: :evil: Just to top things off i've been collecting Disco records since '79....... Found heaven here in terms of knowledge from you all... 8) |
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#10
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| Thanks to all who've responded so far. If there are others on the forum who are or were DJs then please reply and tell us a little about yourselves. Thanks.
__________________ Bernie ================================ |
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#11
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| Quote:
Don't worry guys, Art knows what I mean. :lol: |
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#12
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| I used to think I was a club DJ from '72 - '87 until I started visiting this site. Now I'm not so sure. :lol: All the venues I played were relatively small, the very first being the smallest (120 on a good night), although we did have Bob Marley & The Wailers play live to an audience of about 60 in 1973 at the time of Catch A Fire. I then went to Spain for the best part of the next 3 years (Marbella [20 months] & Puerto Alcudia,Mallorca [ 3 seasons], both upmarket although Marbella was ultra glossy) with the odd mobiles and odd club nights in my local area in between. Both these clubs had a capacity of about 400 Then, from early '78 I had about 20 months back in Southampton (capacity 250) followed by a year in London's West End (capacity 200) 'til the end of '80, both with the same manager. 1981 was the worst year of my DJ life when it was hard to get any decent work, I had some but not enough. I played odd nights at two Southampton clubs (capacities 400 and 300), but nothing seemed to gel. Then in February '82 I landed a club in Winchester (capacity 250) that took me through to New Year '83. From then until my eventual retirement in June '87 I worked two venues for the same company in Eastleigh and Portsmouth (capacity of both 600). In my career I auditioned for work twice. The first time I got the gig (in '72) the second time I didn't and so I retired. I also answered adverts in National Music papers twice (and got the gig both times) and a local newspaper once and got that gig too. I was poached on a few occasions and saw my earnings more than triple in my 3 seasons in Mallorca. I guess I did something right although was I ever there? :lol: In all that time I was fairly broke most of the time (too many records bought, too many drinks consumed) but I lived the life and was happy doing it. |
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#13
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| Quote:
__________________ The Pounding Drums, The Flashing Lights... |
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#14
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| Ok NickNack.Meant to get around to this.It seems like another lifetime ago but I can fondly say that I was an original DJ in the early days of disco prior to it being the world wide phenomenon it became. I first became resident DJ in 1972at a small upstairs club called Stop 33 in Toronto.It was the creation of a restauranteur who had a well known Italian restaurant called La Grotta that had an empty space upstairs.Travelling to New York City he had seen the emerging trend of people spinning records in small clubs foe entertainment called discotheques.So he brought the idea back home.I laugh when I recall my days spinning on that equipment.A Fisher Amp maybe 100 watts max output can't remember the speakers of which there were only two full range hanging from the ceiling.Turntables(?) were belt driven with ceramic needles.(Ohh the wear and tear!)Mixing was not an established artform yet.You simply let the record end and switched the output via the dial selector on the amplifier to the other record.Tunes for dancing were strictly R&b or Soul.James Brown was the king in those days to get the dance floor filled.Others were Sam & Dave,Wilson Pickett,Donnie Elbert,Bobby Bare etc.This venue sat at 33 Dundas Street W. in Toronto and was sold to developers in 1973 to begin the construction of the Eaton Centre.At this time there were probably only a few discos in Toronto.Notably The Scene,Le Spot and Jo Jo's all offering the same type of venue .100 people capacity when packed and lineups that lasted hours to get in. I moved on to JoJo's in 1973 .To me this is what disco's were all about small,intimate where everybody knew each other and just wanted to dance and enjoy the music.It had state of the art equipment at the time.MacIntosh Amplifiers on a Biamped system that featured JBL scooped bass bins with radial horns.Spent two glorious years there.Owners sold the business to gay interests . I moved on to what was then the premier entertainment club in Toronto.Koutoubia in the Roehampton Hotel.This was designed in the Casablanca theme with Moorish columns middle eastern tapestries on the wall and waitresses dressed in harem outfits.Yowsah!They outdid Hooters when it came to waitress appeal.Anyways this venue combined live entertainment with disco and brought in the disco artists of the day.Gloria Gaynor,Crown Heights Affair,Disco-tex and the Sex-o-lettes,Carol Williams,Ecstasy,Passion and Pain to name a few.This place as they say was the bomb.It featured a tri amped system.Cerwin Vega Earthquake bass bins,Klipsch horn Voice of The Theatre midrange with electovoice horns.This club held 400-500 people whicj was huge in those days. Moved onto Faces in 1978 which was at the HOJO's by the airport and began the Sunday disco happening which became huge as most places in Toronto were shutup tight on Sundays.Thursday and Saturdays I was resident DJ at Greystones in Aurora. I then began mobile work and mixed it in with club gigs here and there through the eighties.during the nineties did strctly mobile work and retired from the business entirely in 1998. 26 years.Where has the time gone? So I guess I like others feel blessed in having been there at the beginning of the disco phenomenon and having seen the evolution and sadly the demise of a great era in music.It certainly had it's influence from a social and musical standpoint and it's great to see some of the younger forum members rediscovering it.My only wish is that they could have experienced the vibe. Bernie you are to be congratulated on keeping disco music alive and kicking and for pulling together a wealth of talent and experience amongst the members who some of which I am truly in awe of with their knowledge and have great respect for because I know what they've seen and done.Thanks for allowing me to be part of this great group. |
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#15
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| First gig was at the gay 'centre ' in Dublin (there were no bars or clubs) back in 1980 and i was crap :( Then moved to London, have worked at: Substaion, Reserection Glory Hole The Mens Room Powderbubble (Dublin) Ham(Dublin) Arena (Barcelona) Mediterraneo(Sitges) XXL (Sitges) Love Muscle and various parties. Started of playing hi-energy then moved into house with a bit of disco thrown in. Worst period was when Trade/Hard House was popular as that was all people wanted. Currently still playing regularly but not frequently :-). I was inspired by the clubs I visited when I lived in NY in 81 & 82 such as The Saint, River Club, The Anvil, Alex in Wonderland & Kamikaze. When I moved to London in 85 there was nothing like them there and no-where to dance after 3.30am. It wasn't til the advent of House and a club called Troll that I got excited about music again. Now I love my funky house and old school disco |
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