If
you were a DJ, not so very long ago, you were either of two things: an
on-air radio host or a forlorn and pitiable figure eking out a living
on popular culture's corners, spinning theme records at birthday
parties or playing The Hokey-Pokey at suburban roller rinks.
Then came disco. And hip-hop. And electronica. Music for dancing,
music that could be shaped, scratched and manipulated solely for the
purpose of unabashed rump-shakery. The people behind such manipulation
ceased to be wage earners cranking the gramophones of others - they
became artists in their own right. In a three-decade blink, the person
behind the decks went from afterthought to "star." And Denver has its
own constellation.
There are those who spin the uber-latest party hits, those who
write, record and perform their own mixes, those who have abanoned
vinyl for the ease of a computer. There are hip-hoppers, goth kids,
Brit-pop aficianados, breakbeat heads, even a few who sport defunct
Macintosh computers on their noggins while performing.
But, differences aside, they all have a few things in common: a
passion for music, a desire to get the party started and the simple
sleeves-rolled work ethic needed to make it happen. We look at a
handful of some of our city's busiest and most influential DJs.
Michael Trundle and Tyler Jacobson
Michael Trundle and Tyler Jacobson don't have a style. They
aren't easily boxed as "house" or "booty" or what have you. They don't
even have clever DJ names - unless you count "The Denver 3" (now two,
since cohort Tim Cook moved on), and we don't. What they have is maybe
the most popular club night in Denver, Lipgloss on Fridays at La Rumba.
"We're mostly genre-less," said Trundle. "We play mostly indie
rock and Brit-pop. We stay away from the super-standard '80s hits, and
from hip-hop, but the only thing we don't ever play is techno/house."
The two have been spinning the likes of Morrissey and Charlatans U.K. together for five years.
"We completely stumbled into it," Trundle said. "I wasn't
planning on it going long-term. I don't think any of us thought that it
would keep going and going."
Go it did - from its initial home at 60 South (which then
became the South Park Tavern) to La Rumba. In between, Trundle managed
to finish his master's degrees in Literature and Latin at the
University of Colorado/Denver and both developed a strong feel for the
realities of a DJ's existence.
"DJing isn't my day job," said Jacobson. "I can't imagine how
hectic my life would be if I didn't have an understanding boss. I would
probably have to pick between one or the other."
While Trundle's DJ work keeps his bills paid, he, too, recognizes the position's inherent shelf life.
"You can't be a DJ forever. At some point you're going to be the
60-year-old guy and the kids won't want to listen to you," Trundle
said.
The practical end, as Trundle put it, is to move into ownership
of a bar or club. Given their insight into that confused world afforded
by the previous five years of late nights, it sounds like a natural
transition.
"All DJs think they are going to be Paul Oakenfold," he said. "And get paid thousands to fly all over. It just doesn't happen."
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Track they can't live without: "It changes. All last year
it was Bloc Party's Banquet," Trundle says. "But we're kind of in that
transitional phase right now."
• Local DJ they'd pay to see: "Peter Black
(Rockstars Are Dead). I do a couple of nights with him," Trundle says.
"He's one of the few I see on a regular basis."
• Where they spin: "Lipgloss, Friday at La Rumba. Also a hip-hop night Thursdays (Trundle only) at Traxx with Peter Black."
• Records in their collection: Around 4,500. "60,000 songs, give or take - about 500 albums I carry around for DJing."
• Day job: Trundle DJs full time, while Jacobson
is technical support for a Mac-based Web-hosting company, MacHighway.
"The result of having a job where I have to wake up at 6 in the morning
means that I can't really DJ multiple nights in a week on a regular
basis," Jacobson says. "Hence my lower profile on the DJ scene."
• On the Web: www.myspace.com/lipglossdenver3
Emily Amanda Green
Memo to all mandolinists, jazz trombonists, dobro players and
other practitioners of the instrumental arts: Keep that up and your
kids are gonna become DJs.
"My dad was a bluegrass musician and my mom was a
singer/songwriter," said DJ MLE of her childhood in Texas. "Bluegrass
is very upbeat, and I was raised to dance to music."
She's dancing these days. In addition to hosting a biweekly
radio show on breaksfm - an Internet radio station devoted to breakbeat
music - and being a regular on the underground scene as part of the
Supabreakz crew, the self-described purveyor of "hard, funky
breakbeats" is aiming to make her work behind the tables full time.
Along with a sponsorship from Stanton (maker of mixers, needles
and headphones) she's recently hooked up with At Large Entertainment, a
booking agency that aims to get her spinning at clubs around the world.
It's a career that almost wasn't: Emily Amanda Green was
interested in electronic music before she moved to Colorado in the
mid-'90s to attend nursing school, but even after an ex-boyfriend
taught her to spin, she saw it merely as a fun hobby. The late-night
lifestyle took its toll.
"I got really sick in 2003 and had to stop," she said. "I was ready to sell my turntables."
An invite from her friend Jamie Kent to join the Angelic Crew -
a group of local female DJs, now disbanded - changed her life. "It
didn't start out as a career," she said. "That's when I realized it was
more than just a passion. It was bred into me." "Only a Few by Eskmo.
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• Track she can't live without: "Only a Few by Eskmo. I've been playing it for the last year, and I can't take it out."
• Local DJ she'd pay to see: "DJ Ishe. He's been producing a lot, lately - he's a great breakbeat DJ. I love to watch him."
• Where she spins: "Everywhere. I don't have a set weekly residency. I spin a lot at The Shelter, Tabu- mainly underground parties."
• Records in her collection: Close to 1,000
• Day job: Registered nurse/poison information specialist at Rocky Mountain Poison Center.
• On the Web: www.djmle.com
FRIENDS IN STEREO
orange peel moses, Reggie Lafaye, Colin Chapman
Most successful artistic collaborations aren't the result of
careful planning and a well-executed business model. Think Picasso and
Braque, or Captain and Tennille.
Local DJ/electronic group Friends in Stereo sprouted from
similarly accidental circumstances when vocalist orange peel moses
asked fellow DJs PJ Stroller (Reggie Lafaye) and Satori-C (Colin
Chapman) to remix his solo track, Jesus Was An Alien Magician.
"We dug it so much we began producing together on a regular basis," Lafaye said.
And it's just that simple. The eternally orange-clad moses' deep
pipes form the perfect audial accompaniment to the snaking nest of
party breakbeats and electro stompers that has Friends in Stereo
quickly ascending the dance music ladder, and not just 'round these
parts.
While the three play frequent parties and have appeared at such
diverse venues as the country-leaning Bender's 13th Avenue Tavern and
dance-music palace The Church, their net is spreading wider by the
week.
"We played our first out-of-state gigs this year," moses said.
"One in an L.A. nightclub and one at Burning Man. In March, we're
hoping to play at the Winter Music Conference in Miami." They also
played an after-party at Sundance Film Festival in January. Orange peel
plans on releasing and touring behind his second solo effort,
tentatively tagged Anatomically Correct.
While national notoriety is certainly on the Friends' to-do list, they aren't complaining about their prospects locally.
"The 'Mile High Club' is a great place for dance music right
now," said moses. "Our goal is to take the music as far and wide as
possible. Denver happens to be our starting point."
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• Track they can't live without: "Robot Romance by Friends in Stereo featuring vocals by Melinda Dickson."
• Local DJ they'd pay to see: "As far as locals go, Jansten, Kaya, Little Mike (currently working for Beatport Berlin), MLE, Scott Paradis, Ty Tek and Ivy."
• Where they spin: "In Denver, we've played
Bender's, The Church, The Funky Buddha, The Gothic, The Loft, Milk,
Parallel 17, Red Rocks (2nd Stage), Shelter, Tabu, Via, Vinyl and The
Westin Resort in Westminster."
• Records they own: "Combined, thousands of
records, CDs and MP3s. But we are primarily a live dance music act that
plays 95 percent originals, so we rely mostly on a software platform
called Ableton Live. We rarely spin vinyl anymore."
• Day jobs: Satori-C is a lead install technician
at ListenUp Audio; PJ Stroller is a senior software engineer at
webMethods; orange peel moses is managing editor at Image Magazine
• On the Web: www.friendsinstereo.com
DJ SARA T
Sara Thurston
An economist might identify DJ Sara T as an example of a
succesful independent business - a brand, almost - that has thrived
through nimble diversification. Of course, that would require said
economist to stop shakin' it for a minute.
Easier said than done. Getting people moving is what Sara T
(aka Sara Thurston) does, at her regular "Danceotron" club nights -
well, that, along with owning and operating a boutique (Chielle),
providing a live soundtrack for the play 1001 at the Denver Center for
the Performing Arts, doing design work for www.hookedonnature.com and generally growing her own hip corporation of one.
"I'm always looking for new projects, people to work with," she
said. "I just got back from my first East Coast tour, and I'm getting
ready for South by Southwest."
From hosting a night at the Snake Pit with KVCU-AM (1190) to
playing '50s rock at The Skylark to spinning downtempo and lounge with
a local burlesque troupe, 10 years of DJ experience have taught her to
understand what an audience wants.
"What I'm known best for is versatility," she said. "A lot of
people say that; delivering is the hard part. I think of myself as a
librarian of music."
Navigating the shifting seas of underground culture can be
tricky - last year's superstar is this year's "who?" - but Sara T's
ability to seek out and embrace the new keeps her work vital.
"I have to keep growing," she said. "Denver is shifting and evolving. You have to go after what you want."
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• Track she can't live without:Surkin, Ghetto OBS 2006
• Where she spins: She'll be at the after-party for 1001 Saturday and Feb. 24 at Double Daughters, 1632 Market St.
• Local DJ she'd pay to see: DJ Ivy
• Records in her collection" Approximately 3,000
• Day job: "I have several. I've been self-employed for two years now- I'm not pretending like it's easy."
• On the Web: www.myspace.com/saratea
DJ WYATT EARP
Wyatt Jenkins
DJ Wyatt Earp doesn't need to fly to Ibiza in his own jet or be
invited to play some celebrity's birthday in South Beach. He doesn't
need to see his name in 50-point type next to a photo of himself in
oversized sunglasses. Making late-nighters groove to something new will
do just fine, thanks, and besides - he's already lived that life.
"From about 1999 to 2003, I traveled constantly," Earp, nee
Wyatt Jenkins, said. "I had a record label (Hochokai), I was selling a
ton, going to Brazil, London, South Africa - I got tired of it. Tired
of airports, being in different places. It's not my style to be a rock
star."
But if any local DJ were a rock star, it would be Earp. He
developed into a leading light in Denver's dance scene in the early
'90s, spinning at clubs like Rock Island and the I-Beam. He was a
member of the now-defunct Casa Del Soul collective, which brought the
Mile High electronic scene international attention, and was a founder -
and first employee - of online music store beatport.com. And it's that
last effort that he finds most important.
"It's like an iTunes for dance music," he said. "iTunes has
these iPod-only formats. That doesn't work for DJs. (Beatport) is
another outlet - safe, free and legal downloading of MP3s and WAVs.
It's the No. 1 dance music channel in the world, here, in Denver."
Still, Earp still spins dance music a few times a week.
"It keeps me in the loop," he said.
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• Track he can't live without: "I play whatever
isn't out yet. ... Before Internet shopping there would be that one
track that literally every DJ would play. Now it's segregated,
disposable. It's all moving at such a quick pace now, I can't remember
what was in my set four months ago."
• Local DJ he would pay to see: "DJ Foxx. He's a friend of mine, he's from Chicago. He has soul, just soul - those old roots."
• Where he spins: Saturday nights at 2 AM, 1144 Broadway.
• How many records in his collection: "I've gone completely digital. ... But I probably have 20,000 sitting in the storage area of my house."
• Day job: Director of operations, Beatport.com
• On the Web: www.myspace.com/wyatt_earp_