Archive for the ‘Music’ Category
How Much Does An Average DJ Cost For A Party?
Are you planning to hold a big party? One way to make your party fun and cool is to hire the best DJ who can provide you with great party music and entertainment.
So how much does an average DJ cost for a party?
For your party at home, you can hire an average decent DJ for $100-150 per hour. But if you’re planning to have a really big teen party with nightclub sound and lighting, the cost for hiring a DJ can amount to around $250 an hour.
The rate would depend on the quality and level of service which you want to have.
On the other hand, if you’re planning to have your party in a bar or club, a DJ usually charges $10-500 an hour, depending on the capacity and style of the bar. A shift is usually between 1 ½ to 5 hours.
If you’re planning to hold a wedding party, you can get wedding DJs for $100 or less for an hour. Many of these DJs are part time hobbyists. However, this can be risky as they might only have low grade equipment and you’ll end up disappointed. Another option is that you can hire someone for $200-600 on your wedding so you can be assured of good performance. Never hire a very cheap DJ or you might regret it. So if you have limited budget, try to think of other alternatives.
There is practically a huge difference between a full time company and a part time hobbyist. A full time company would rely on your referrals to get future business opportunities so you are assured that they will give their best service for your wedding or party. You can look at wedding DJ costs with their references. What you need to do is just ask for recent clients’ names, contact numbers, or e-mails. Look for clients who availed of their services in the past 6 months or less. This information will be readily given to you by a reputable company.
If you’ve got a bigger budget for a DJ, you can hire someone who may charge from $1,500-4,500. This usually includes lighting, staging, props, and even dancers.
Here’s a tip, you can compare prices by interviewing companies or by asking people around. You can even search up DJ costs and companies online. This way, you will be able to choose from several options before making your final decision. Remember, choose wisely and you’re party will be surely a blast!
This is an article written by the author of HowMuchIsIt.org, a website where you can find the cost of anything party related like Limo Rental Prices.
Music in New York
New York is one of the music capitals of the world. It’s no surprise that, with many concert venues, a large population and a thriving entertainment business, New York City has a large claim on the music industry.
NYC is home to some of the biggest record labels in the country, such as Atlantic Records, Columbia Records, Def Jam, and Epic. These labels have a huge influence on the music industry are constantly scouting new and upcoming talent.
The big apple is also a place of inspiration for many people, with the bright lights, the bustling city and the dreams of making a better life. Just take a look at the song Empire State of Mind, by Alicia Keys and Jay Z, in which they pay tribute to the amazing city.
With so many concert venues and such a huge population, New York always hosts the best concerts of the year. There is always a concert to go see and they always get the major headliners. For Example, both Alicia Keys and Taylor Swift have upcoming concerts in Madison Square Garden.
If music is your passion then you will want to plan a trip to New York to get the full music experience. You will want to make sure that you bring a New York Map and a radius map of the area you will be staying in because New York is a huge place and it is easy to get lost, especially if you are walking from place to place. Once you have those then you can hit the streets and experience all different types of music, whether it be an undiscovered indie band at a local bar or a huge concert in the park, New York will make your musical senses tingle.
Hottest Concert of the Summer at the Las Vegas Palms
He would catch a grenade for you and he thinks you’re beautiful just the way you are. Yep, that’s right, Bruno Mars is on a nationwide tour with Janelle Monae and they are hitting all the big cities.

Mars got his start songwriting for artists and when his songs became number one hits he decided that it was time to start his own career. He then collaborated with B.o.B. on the chart topping song, Nothin’ On You and also worked with Travie McCoy on the song, Billionaire. After his collaboration success, he decided to write his own album which has been nothing short of greatness. With his crooning voice and catchy lyrics you know this show will be a crowd pleaser.
Opening for Bruno Mars, is Janelle Monae, the R & B, indie pop singer. Monae has a very unique sound and blends the music of soul, funk, and indie pop. She has been nominated for multiple grammy awards and she is sure to put on a great performance.
The tour is nationwide but the show you will definitely not want to miss will be June 16, 2011 at the Las Vegas Palms hotel. What better way to celebrate summer than a trip to Las Vegas to see a fantastic performer. You can book a room at the beautiful Palms hotel in Las Vegas, see the show, and experience all that Vegas has to offer. The Palms is a beautiful hotel which offers immaculate rooms, fine dining, and entertainment. This is the perfect opportunity to see the concert you have been dying to see and have a little getaway for yourself too.
The ClearAudio Master Reference Turntable for the wealhy DJ

If being a DJ has been working out really, really well and you have some extra cash lying around you might want to consider buying a ClearAudio Master Reference Turntable. Just don’t expect to be doing any real mixing on the Master Reference series turntables though, they are more of luxury home turntables than standard DJ equipment. The zenith of the series the ClearAudio CMB Turntable was painstakingly hand crafted in Germany,and features three different synchronized motors controlled by ClearAudio’s Accurate Power Generator to guarantee a negligible amount of wow and flutter. The entire turntable is designed to reduce resonance and look stunning in any location. Your vinyl records will rest comfortably on the precision-turned silicon/acrylic platter which sits atop a ceramic magnetic bearing. The entire turntable is built to last with the highest of quality parts and can even accommodate up to three separate tone arms. The ClearAudio Master Refence Turntables are really just for the most dedicated audiophile, priced at $27,500. The ClearAudio Master Reference Turntable also carry a manufacture’s warranty of 10 years.
Find out more about the turntable at ClearAudio
Mixing music with Max MSP and Processing
Check out this creative and unique visual mixer created by Christian Bannister. Bannister, of Subcycle Labs, set out to create a interactive interface that combined music visualization along with audio mixing. His efforts resulted in Steeplechase, a large multi-touch LCD screen that acts as a music visualizer and allows a DJ to mix in real time. Bannister created Steeplechase using Max MSP and Processing programs, two software programs that we will focus on in the future. Bannister hopes this his programs can ultimately help audiences connect with both music and DJs more by allowing people to make a visual link to the DJ’s effect on music.
Music and Philosophy in Singapore
Three days here, and after all the talk about how we were going to find out how the rest of the world thinks about music, all we’ve talked about is curry. My friends are convinced that the best Indian restaurant in Singapore is this one, and it’s because of their curries. I am arguing that it could be any one of the dozens of Indian restaurants here, but we just happened to stop at this one first. Chau, the other big ego in the band, is arguing that this isn’t coincidence. He feels that since we’ve woken up in a pure state of touristic consciousness, our path is unfolding in ways that are already predetermined. All we have to do, he argues, is keep doing what we’re doing.
This is an old argument between us. I can tell that the other band members are as irritated as me, although they certainly do a good job of pretending that they’re enjoying every moment of the food. It keeps popping into my head that we’re actually eating Chau’s car. He sold his ’73 Impala so we could have room and board while we’re here. This baigan choka, then, I imagine, is the dashboard mat. He’s busy eating his rear-view mirror while we’re deciding what we should do for the rest of the day. So far, the only good idea is to eat more curry.
We’ve been playing together for only two years, but we argue like bands that have a history that lasts at least a decade. I think this might be a testament to our staying power, but I also know that my thinking is delusional. It doesn’t seem to matter all that much. Later on this afternoon, we have a meeting with a band we met last night, because we want to see how we sound if we mix. It’s a good day. This is a very good day. Whether or not free will will win out over determinism is an issue that might not be resolved this time around, but there’s little doubt that we’re living a dream we always had.
Young Musician in New York
Travis played the piano and like many other young musicians, actors, singers and artists he found his way to New York City and wanted to forge out a career there. He sang and wrote his own songs and ultimately wanted to make his own albums and have a solid solo performance career he wanted to play in some Broadway productions as well as a few of New York’s famous piano bars. He loved the musical theatre and he figures the experience of playing for a few Broadway shows would further his ultimate intentions of following in the iconic footsteps of his hero and main inspiration, Elton John. Travis believed that one day the tourists who visited the city and stayed in one of the New York luxury hotels would one day be there to watch him perform.
Like most of the other young hopefuls Travis arrived into town with very little money and no connections or job prospects. He has a nice baby grand piano back at his home in Massachusetts, but he could only bring his keyboards when he moved as he had no way of moving his piano or anywhere to put it. So, armed with only his keyboard he began to search the want ads looking for calls for pianists in both clubs and shows. As it turned out there was a little Italian restaurant near his small studio apartment that had a piano in it. Travis noticed this as he stopped in to ask for an application to wait tables there. He returned that night to check out the piano player and was told that their latest musician became sick and returned to his home upstate.
Travis wasted no time telling the owner of the place that he could play the piano and offered to perform that night for free as a sort of audition. The little old man who still ran the register and greeted guests agreed to this trial run and it was actually the beginning of a positive relationship. Travis was good and he quickly gained some local following who would frequent the restaurant and order dinner and or appetizers and drinks on the nights Travis played. He in turn received a regular, though small, income and had the perfect opportunity to try out new songs and material. He played there at that restaurant for the first two years he was in the City.
The Strokes in NYC
When it comes to boutique hotels, New York has a stunning variety to choose from. Our hotels are extremely distinctive, following in the boutique tradition of emphasizing uniqueness. We offer a splendid alternative to the chain hotel, with an array of choices that will suit every style and sensibility. All of our hotels meet the highest standards of the industry, offering lodging that is contemporary and still traditional, where the best of the old and the best of the new come together. There is always an impeccable sense of design here that would impress even the most seasoned New Yorker. Comfort and luxury are our specialties, and we hold firm to the local standards of service, which are perhaps the highest in the world.
You’ll love the sense of rejuvenation you’ll feel after one night here, and you’ll find yourself ready to go off and have your own New York adventure. New York is what it’s cracked up to be, having been a magnet for the best minds in the world for generations. It attracts people from all walks of life, and all cultures, languages, and sensibilities. It’s the kind of place that’s not like any other kind of place in the world, and fosters innovative and courageous talents like The Strokes. Headed by charismatic, and slightly insane, lead singer Julian Casablancas, the Strokes began here in 1999, as part of the garage band revival. Casablancas and the band’s guitarist, Albert Hammond, Jr., met at a boarding school in Switzerland, where they were sent for bad behavior as young teens.
They met again in New York City, when Hammond was attending Tisch, and shared an apartment. They joined forces with Nick Valensi, Nikolai Fraiture, and Fabrizio Moretti, to form one of the most successful bands in rock history. The climb, in retrospect, seems very quick and easy. The Strokes rose very quickly to the top of the charts, after the band had already made a huge impression on London audiences. For their hometown friends in New York City, catching on took a few months longer, but just as sure. The Strokes sound is undeniably contagious, with skillful and stylishly sloppy playing accompanying vocals that are positively retro. In the post-ironic musical present, the Strokes are a wonderfully self-conscious yet passionate band of romantic muses, singing the same songs of love and loss that we always already grew up on.
Drumming through Melbourne
The company I work for arranged for my department to fly to Australia and stay at one of the top Melbourne hotels where we will participate in a drumming experience for team building and leadership training. There are 27 people in my department, that’s quite an expense for our company to make us learn how to drum. We were all laughing when we got the memo, but, any chance to go to Melbourne, Australia, even if it is with all my fellow co-workers, sounded good to me.
When we all assembled at a conference room in the hotel, I had no idea what to expect. The facilitators put us at ease right away and told us that by drumming together has been scientifically proven to help boost our immune system, relieve stress and is an unbeatable ice-breaker because it requires team work and it will motivate, inspire, empower and unify our whole department. Of course they knew what our first question was, ‘how will drumming do this?’ and they were prepared with an answer: they told us to consider the pure and simple musical elements which are the building blocks of music, drumming and percussion. Those elements are rhythm and harmony, melody and pitch. But, they also included timbre into the mix which is more a dynamic rather than an element.
They continued to explain that the elements and timbre have the potential for promoting and inducing relaxation, peace, calmness, energy and rejuvenation. All are a part of healing. The very elements and dynamics of percussion and music have been used the world over to induce healing. The healing does not refer to the healing of bleeding skin, or other physical traumas, though it may help with how quickly these ailments heal. Rather, the healing refers to developing a greater sense of well being. They told us that whatever state a person is in, that combining the elements of music and the dynamics of percussion, will only increase the sense of well being and relaxation, so then it can be said that a healing has occurred. So, the art of drumming is an ideal healing art.
But, we had no idea what this had to do with building up are team. They handed us our drums and told us that by the end of the day, we should have created a piece of music, all percussion, that we would be proud to play at any symphony house. I’ve never had so much fun in my life. My whole department, every single person all worked so well together and we even found out that some of our team mates were very talented drummers! We worked through the whole day, not even noticing the time, we enjoyed everyones input (drumming) and tried to figure out how to incorporate everyones own sense of rhythm into our creation, our symphony of percussions. When we got to play our piece in front of the facilitators, we were all beaming with smiles and totally paying attention to all the nuances and changes in rhythms anyone brought into the piece. We all just flowed with the beat. When it was over, I noticed a few of my team mates were crying. From that day on, I knew my department now had the means to work in harmony together.

