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Serving all of Greenville County, SC (+80 miles) | email: corey@scpartydj.com | call: (864) 367-9546
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-Katie, 9/2014
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We often help out other vendors to make sure your event is as perfect as possible
We have filled glasses, set up chairs and many other tasks
We take you through your day so you don't have to worry
We had a wonderful wedding thanks to Corey Brown! He has a wonderful questionnaire that helps to make your day as perfect as it can be. Also he is a lot of fun. If you book him for a wedding, he has a lot of fun games you can utilize during the reception that everyone will get in to.

SC Party DJ Blog

The DJ and "Bitrate"

by Corey Brown on 04/21/13

The DJ and "Bitrate"

by Corey Brown "The Wedding DJ" of The Wedding DJ - Servicing 120 mile radius of Greenville, SC(19-Apr-2013)

What is a Bitrate and how does it affect customers looking to hire a DJ? In today's modern world of DJ's you would think that one could simply download a song and play it which of course you could but one thing that must be considered is the bitrate of the song.

Wikepedia describes a bitrate as:

In telecommunications and computingbit rate (sometimes written bitrate or as a variable R[1]) is the number of bits that are conveyed or processed per unit of time.

One byte per second (1 B/s) corresponds to 8 bit/s.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bitrate

Now without getting to technical most songs are downloaded to a cloud player these days and you stream them from there at varying bitrates. 128 is thought to be good for the casual listener and will work fine for most applications so when you buy a song and down load it or rip it from a cd the computer many times saves the song at this rate since it is considered a quality rate and takes a minimum amount of hard drive space.

Here is the catch though - if you are a DJ like me and are amplifying this sound through monster speakers and loud levels there is a notable difference between 128 and 256.

At The Wedding DJ and SC party DJ we always download the highest bitrate available and save it to the hard drive rather than depending on the internet to stream. We are commited to giving you the best possible sound since you are the best customers in the world.

How Important is Twiiter?

by Corey Brown on 01/21/13

This topic is more for my colleagues, friends, and business owners more so than my customers. While speaking with my Friend Jen Fisher of Creative Cuties Bowtique and Gifts it got me thinking about twitter. I have used this social network for a while now and wanted to explain why. I do a lot of work with kids and do a fair amount of teen party's and I have discovered that the high school age child Tweets everything. What that means to me is that our future customers will be tweeting more than most. So you don't know how to tweet - believe or not me either. Luckily for us old folks if you go to facebook apps you can link your facebook and twitter accounts and everything that you put on facebook gets "tweeted". So you can actually tweet by doing what you do already on facebook. It also works the other way as well if you get a "tweet" and "retweet" (share) then it goes to facebook. There are several different apps for this out there you just have to find the one that works for you. So in my humble opinion I think Twitter is very important. Have to go now because I am signing up for an Instragam account....that's probably the next big thing with the kids but that's just a hunch. Thanks for reading!



Follow us on Twitter at : https://twitter.com/The_Wedding_DJ



In response to the comment from Brenda Owen of Lakeside Wedding Officiant & Minister I would like to add that I think (I really am not an expert on this) that the younger generation likes it because it is short and to the point. That is part of the Twitter attraction for some. High school students have 5 minutes to get from class to class and tweet something or are tweeting in class when they shouldn't be so it has to be short and fast. Besides, we live in a world that thinks four minutes is way to long to wait for the microwave to get done.  I think after students graduate from school they will have gotten to accustomed to the short and to the point message to lay it down.
  

Greenville, SC area Wedding Venues

by Corey Brown on 01/20/13

I am frequently asked the question which venue should I use. A lot of this decision is based on personal taste and of course budget. My colleague and friend Brenda M. Owen (http://www.WeddingWoman.net) has compiled a list of numerous venues she has had the pleasure of officiating at. You can visit her link here:

http://weddingwoman1.blogspot.com/2012/05/wedding-venues-i-recommend-scganc.html?showComment=1350453034009&m=1#c6006282250194394953

Another good source is located on another website at:

http://www.bestgreenvilleweddings.com/greenville-wedding-venue/1

As always, Thank you for reading and feel free to comment.

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Visit our webpage at http://www.theweddingdj.net

You have a right to remain silent (but please don't)

by Corey Brown on 01/18/13

As a Greenville Wedding DJ and as a Professional in the wedding industry one thing that I have discovered is that occasionally a couple will keep quiet when they should speak up. When I meet with a client to go over their contract I have started to emphasize that they should feel freely to voice their opinion. Anyone who is truly professional in the weddubg industry wants to know everything you are thinking. I will of course give you my opinion on any number of given topics as well as what I have seen work and what what did not work but ultimately it is up to you as the client. You have the right to remain silent but please don't. Speak your mind and feel free to tell us exactly what you want and don't want on your day. That is what set's me and my colleagues apart from the amateur DJ or other professional. We get it - it's your day not ours. In an earlier post I wrote that if "you were just having a party then hire the least expensive services you could find". That is not true for weddings since there are no "do overs". Thanks for reading.

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visit our website at

http://www.theweddingdj.net  or

http://www.SCpartydj.com  

To Bose or Not to Bose

by Corey Brown on 12/25/12

Merry Christmas and Happy New year to all of our clients and readers. As the New Year makes its way around “The Wedding DJ” has been doing some research on speakers so that we can include Speaker upgrades in our 2013 year budget. As you may or may not know there are many different brands, makes and models out there. Some of the leaders are Bose, JBL, and QSC. There seems to be a trend amongst Mobile DJ’s to buy Bose (I was considering the Bose L1 Model 2 w/ B2) and get you the client to use their company’s service because they have “Bose”. Personally I am a fan of Bose for home audio and own several of their products and must give their marketing team excellent marks because I had all but made up my mind to give them $7,000. The particular Bose product I am referring to is the L1 series and I must also add that is was originally designed for one musicians to plug into one Bose set and then the same process was to be copied by all of the other musicians in a group until everyone had their own individual sound. I do not believe it was originally intended to be used by DJ’s.

One of the reasons for the trend (other than marketing) is Bose is using a technology called line array speaker, which has been around for many years. I will give them credit for making it work and portable. Without going into the boring details, these speakers project sound in many different directions using wizardry and engineering, so much so that the volume standing next to the speaker is close to the same volume when you are standing across the room. I will admit it is amazing. However when you consider the technical specifications submitted by Bose and my favorite QSC, the QSC speaker model KW 153 along with a KW 181 has a larger frequency range and in my opinion outperform Bose all day long for a mobile DJ setting (That means it will sound better).

Here it is my main point. I recently went to a reception where a DJ was using Bose. I drooled at first because that is what you supposed to do when you see the name “Bose” up close. However, they were loud (too loud) in all the wrong places. I discovered that line array is awesome if you are in a concert listening to your favorite band. You can use half the amplifier power or less and be heard everywhere in the room and the big concert halls are already using this technology.  For “The Wedding DJ” we are a mobile DJ company and just about every event we do there are people scattered around the edges of your reception and or party who are talking and not dancing. These people are your guests and if they don’t want to dance or are taking a break from dancing then they should be able to leave the dance floor and go to their table and talk at a comfortable level.

I offered to test run several different speakers from several different companies and they all declined. Probably scared of what I might say. Anyway, this article all comes down to one point and that is “not to Bose” for my application. I hope this article helps other professionals trying to make the same choices I was between Bose’ Line Array or Traditional system’s (QSC for me).  I also hope that my customers recognize that I have made this choice with them in mind. I actually want the song to drop off at the dance floor and to be significantly quieter elsewhere in the room so that their guests are not uncomfortable.

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