Tuesday, March 4, 2014

 


6 Ways To Survive When DJing In Sports Bars

  1. Know in advance – Check the sporting calendar and talk through with your venue owner or manager which games are important, which ones he is going to (or can) show, and which are going to attract enough people for your DJing to halt while the game is on and the commentary volume goes up.
  2. Add to the atmosphere with some timely tune choices – pick music for the build-up and in the intervals/straight afterwards that reflects the mood of the venue, win, lose or draw – I’m not saying you have to bang out Queen’s “We are the Champions” at full-time (although when the Spanish soccer team won Euro 2008, that’s what the DJ did in the bar we were in… it was excellent, never seen such a celebration as the Spanish on that day…), but you’re a DJ and you should know what tunes are going to work for your crowd, team, sport and occasion. Think it through beforehand. You could even have team anthems ready for touchdowns/goals etc. Do your bit to build the fun.
  3. Don’t think every sports event will mean you’re not DJing – If one fan from out of town wants to watch his team in an inconsequential mid-week, mid-season game, the venue owner may turn the channel on for him, but if your bar is full of people wanting a party, you’ll of course be asked to play music anyway with the commentary turned well down. This is often the case in sports bars who hire DJs, so don’t assume you’re going to be trumped every time. Even when the crowd is 50/50, it could be you, it could be the sports…
  4. Be flexible – If it’s the end of the season, the team on the screen needs to win and another team needs to lose for anything good to come of it, and after 20 minutes it’s clear that’ s not going to happening as things are going in the other direction at a rate of knots, everyone may well lose interest and drift out of the place… unless you can get the sports off the speakers and get the music on. Play it by ear, and be ready to be asked to start (or stop) playing at a moment’s notice.
  5. Be nice - It’s really disheartening when you’ve spent the week preparing your music and you forget it’s an important game, or a load of fans turn up out of the blue and demand the sound up on the sports, taking you off DJ duty and wrecking your plans for the night’s work. But your job is to make the venue owner’s or manager’s life easier, not spit your dummy out when things aren’t going your way. Just take it on the chin. Playing in bars is great practice for DJs, but you’re not always the centre of attention, so get used to it! Likewise if sports fans want to hear the commentary and your manager has asked you to play music, be diplomatic with them – picking fights is dumb and won’t help your case for being re-booked.
  6. If you can’t beat ‘em, join ‘em – Look, you probably love sports as much as you love DJing. Even if you don’t, you can’t do much about it if you’re told to get off by the management and the football or whatever goes on. So grab a beer and get watching. It could be worse!

No comments:

Post a Comment