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Rocky Fontaine Best in the City
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by Jason Newman
by Jason Parham
by Jen Boyles
Johnny Dangerous: If Peaches and Mickey Avalon mated
Lollapalooza day 2, Perry's stage. The dome is packed, a neon-clad crowd smashed against the railing, singing along to Crookers' remix of Kid Cudi's "Day 'n' Nite." A Soulwax edit drops, Daft Punk filters in, the crowd goes bananas. Hardly what one would expect from DJ AM, the tabloids' most notorious nightlife personality, and yet, he seems entirely in his element, grinning and fist-pumping with every new tune dropped. Fact is, though AM's status stems from top-40 sets for Hollywood's it-list, he has a secret penchant for the likes of Ed Banger. We snagged AM after his set for a five-minute chat on everything from notoriety to the New Young Pony Club. Read on.
On being called a "Celebrity DJ"
Well, it depends on what you mean by celebrity DJ. If you're someone who plays for celebrities, that's one thing. It's like a celebrity dentist - my dentist cleans Bruce Willis' teeth, so that makes him a celebrity dentist, right? Then there are people who are celebrities that become DJs because they don't have so much going on in their career anymore. That is what I would assume a celebrity DJ would be. Don't you think that would be the main definition? I mean, what exactly is a celebrity DJ? (he pauses) Well, I guess I'm a celebrity DJ…It's what I've turned into. The fact that I can be in an airport and someone says, "there's DJ AM" means something, right? I just don't consider myself a celebrity, I've never viewed myself that way.
On where he likes to travel
Sure, I travel a lot in the States, but overseas is a lot of fun. I just was in Hong Kong and Australia. Australia's scene is so so good right now - I love Modular. I've been a fan of groups like New Young Pony club for years. I've always been into that early hipster stuff and Australia is the place where a lot of those music trends came from.
On playing what he loves
Yea, yea, my residencies are in Vegas. I've been DJing in clubs now for thirteen years, exactly, and only in the past four years have I been able to play stuff that's not on the radio. But, you know what, the top-40 and pop are the bread and butter. What I just played [at Lollapalooza] is what I love to play though. That, or I love playing classic rock – stuff like Tom Petty and Boston, but playing it like a hip hop DJ, real fast and cutting the tracks together. The thing is, as a DJ, it's not about me. If I'm [at Lollapalooza] I play all the hipster tracks because that's what they want to hear. When I'm in Vegas, I play top 40 – I'm at work, I'm getting paid to be here. I'm not going to be, fuck you all, I'm playing electro all night when they want to hear Fergie. It's about them. I'll take the odd track to educate, but if I didn't have that, I wouldn't be able to pay my mortgage.
On producing his own music
All the big career DJs are producers also – they're the rockstars of electronic music. They get to play their own records and everyone goes nuts. I've dabbled in producing but I'm way too anal to actually release anything so I do edits and remixes of other people's songs. I'd love to [put out my own records], but it's a quality problem, not an idea problem. I'm never in one place long enough to work on producing, I'm always traveling and DJing. I have countless, countless, countless unfinished tracks lying around.
On his favorite artists right now
Number one is the Ting Tings – I'm really in love with them. As I said before, I'm really into a lot of those early bands like New Young Pony Club…and then of course Daft Punk. I won a DJ battle in 1997 playing Busta Rhymes over Da Funk and I've never ever stopped listening to Daft Punk. This whole second emergence with all the new fans…I like it, but I have this whole thing like, motherfucker, I was first!
Get over yourself.
Posted Thursday, August 14, 2008 @ 01:53 by DJ lAMe
"I'm really into a lot of those early bands like New Young Pony Club" hahahah! Why did you interview this guy?
Posted Friday, August 15, 2008 @ 08:31 by confused
what a joke.
Posted Monday, August 18, 2008 @ 02:30 by Chunior
So this guy has built his DJ reputation up by basically playing requests for lots of money to celebs and not doing anything original or noteworthy? You may as well talk to someone who plays bass in a New Young Pony Club cover band. This is the kind of person you put on the front page of your website as a featured interview? Step your game up URB!
Posted Monday, August 18, 2008 @ 04:11 by j
enjoy being a celeb dj. Fergie is grateful.
Posted Tuesday, August 19, 2008 @ 10:22 by VANCUVER
If you have actually seen DJ AM play, you would know he is technically one of the more amazing DJs out there. If you get over whatever misconceptions have been hammered into your head about him, you would find out that he is a musically knowledgeable and technically amazing DJ. The fact that he plays celebrity parties makes a lot of us overlook his talents when in fact, he shouldn't be faulted for making a living. Instead of telling AM to get over himself, maybe some like DJ IAMe should do the same.
Posted Tuesday, August 19, 2008 @ 11:00 by Dani
Its not just about hip hop these days as a club dj, If you want to dj for a living you have to learn to play to all different types of crowds!!! And AM has crazy skills on the turntables !!! DJ LATIN ASSASSIN www.myspace.com/djlatinassassin
Posted Tuesday, August 19, 2008 @ 11:18 by DJ LATIN ASSASSIN
Uhh.."DJ AM will give URB 5 minutes,AND THAT'S IT! HAA. wait, 4:50 now.
Posted Tuesday, August 19, 2008 @ 11:30 by 5 mins
I've seen alot of celeb djs and I was ashamed to admit I was a dj. Most celeb djs get paid big bucks and get to play the hot clubs because of their name and not their skill. Dj AM is truly a real dj and I've been impressed by each set I've caught. Now a days the whole essence of Im a house dj, or i'm a breaks dj, or i'm a hip hop dj doesnt exist anymore. With the coming of the laptop dj pretty much anyone can dj. It's only a matter of who can do it best and actually gets down! You can either fight the scene or evolve with it. That's what it comes down to!
Posted Wednesday, August 20, 2008 @ 06:35 by INZO*
"BIG UP TO ALL MY HATERS"
Posted Wednesday, August 20, 2008 @ 09:02 by J.$oL
Some haters up in this biznatch! Obviously not into the DJ game... The man can rock a party or two, ok? Celebrity or not. His ego has been fairly under control, and when he gets to rock underground shit you get to hear a side of AM that you don't get in all of the other clubs where he has to play pop shit. He has inspired many DJ's, let's hope he comes out ok from this plane crash mess, whether he continues to DJ or not, he has worked HARD to earn his popularity and I hope we don't lose him as a person nor as a talent on this planet. >> http://myspace.com/djbis <<
Posted Sunday, September 21, 2008 @ 05:18 by DJ BIS
As usual, the haterz are all talk, blah blah blah. Whether you like Am or not, don't say the man has no skills, cause you just sound dumb. Stop worryin' about what AM is doin' and worry about where your gonna get your next $150 gig. Hahaha. Hoping for a speedy recovery for Travis and AM. Definately talented individuals...
Posted Wednesday, October 01, 2008 @ 01:20 by DJ Ballz