Wedding DJ Contact details

Professional DJ

I take my job as a professional DJ very serious. The combination of Premium equipment, reliability and years of experience with adaptability is what you are selecting when you choose my services for your event. I know weddings like the back of my hand, from the ceremony, breakfast music and official announcements through to the cutting of the cake, first dance and fantastic music selection to suit everyone. My adaptability not only comes with setup configurations to suit awkward shaped venues and large crowds if required, but also as cross multi music genre platform, for example, music from rock and roll or Northern soul to the modern charts or using my mixing skills with the latest EDM or old skool dance tunes. I love all decades and all styles of Music and I carry a vast music library covering indie, rock, reggae, soul, RnB, Ska, Motown, charts, house, party and more! Peace of mind comes as standard, Although I use very high quality and super reliable professional equipment, I always carry backup equipment for every piece of equipment.

It all started on the Dark Side of the Moon

Like most peDark side of the moonople who have the pleasure and privilege of being paid to entertain crowds of people by playing music, my aspirations, interest and love for music was firmly founded when I was very young.  As child in the 1970’s, the world was a very different place. Typically of the 1970’s, smog, coal fires, the rag and bone man and boxed shaped cars was common place and the advent of the modern world, including the internet, compact discs, computers, mobile phones and man bags, had yet to be invented, however, radio was as prevalent then as it is today. During the school week, my mother would shout me up out of bed and I would tumble down the stairs with one eye half open to my awaiting tea, tower of hot toast and the radio playing at a moderate volume on the table. With the dreaded thought of school approaching the radio soon became my sanctuary and form of escapism. After school, I would often sneak my mother’s radio outside and listen to Radio One's teatime radio show with my friend. My love for music began to develop. (I could be very cheesy now and place a sound byte here by john miles, a song entitled ‘music was my first love’, but you might be either too young to remember that 1970’s song, or you might think I was being serious rather than having a playful joke with music history and the relevance to this ‘about me’ page, so I wont do it)  In the late 1970’s my sister left home to marry a guy who, like almost every other typical man from the 70’s, seem to constantly wear demine jackets and jeans, long hair and had somehow established large carpet like growth on the side of his face known as sideburns.  Not long after my sister had left to move onto married life, I noticed she had left behind a record player, headphones and one vinyl album. With my new found desire to explore music, I knew I had to set the player up and play that album, so late one night when my parents thought I was sleeping, I carefully and quietly unpacked the record player, plugged it into the mains and inserted the headphones, and then gently placed the stylus into the outside groove of the vinyl record.  I knew my sister would freak if she knew I was touching her stuff, she freaked at me once for breaking her cactus plant, but that’s another story. I remember looking at the cover of the album as the slight cracking noise began to filter into the headphones, it had picture of prism on it with a black foreground. At this point, if your of a certain age, or indeed a pink Floyd fan, or taken note of the heading and picture in this section and you’re a music genius, you may have already guessed that the album was dark side of the moon. What made the experience even more over whelming was that this was the first time I had experienced stereo, and it was through headphones too which brought the whole album alive in my tiny brain. My mother’s radio was of course mono, and although stereo is now taken for granted, for a young boy who had discovered a love for music, and only ever heard music in mono, stereo was an amazing audio experience. From that point, I wanted every one else to feel what I felt when I listened to music and being a DJ was the answer. 

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