|
Most people would never know it. The party is full of energy, the dance floor is packed, and the DJ is playing all the right
songs. You decide to go over to request a song so you walk up to the DJ booth. When you get there you notice that the DJ
is currently glancing at a strange screen. Not paying it any mind you give the DJ your request.
The DJ presses a few keys on
(is that a keyboard?) and before you can even blink your song is displayed on the screen ready to be played. You then notice
that there aren't even any CD's around! Where is the music coming from? You finally notice a computer neatly nestled in the DJ's case. Everything that you have been dancing to all night has came from a computer!
 This is a new trend that many DJ's all over the world are adapting. Computer DJing is coming a real asset to today's
interactive DJ. It provides a way to may the DJ quicker and more efficient ultimately giving better service to their clients and
partygoers.
To further explain this new technology let us first dismiss some common myths:
We do not play our songs off of "Napster". All of our songs come from original CD's that are encoded to a file on the
computer called MP3. This is way to create CD quality music while optimising
the maximum amount of space on our hard drives. This creates an extensive library of songs that can easily dwarf an average DJ's CD collection.
The computer does not "crash". A common question being asked today is what happens if the computer fails to perform
properly, AKA "crash". Well we would be a bit disingenuous if we said that our computers don't crash. There is no such
thing as a trouble free electronic device. Everything including CD players are eventually going to go down every now and
then.
We just approach it the way we would any other piece of equipment, with proper maintenance and back up
precautions. We ALWAYS bring a professional CD deck and spin CD and MP3 seamlessly. We use a well programmed
professional piece of software that has not "crashed" to this day. If it ever did the party would continue and the partygoers
would never know anything happened. |