![]() | SwizzleChyck: And how the hell did my girl get on the mike behind the dj booth? Why do I not remember seeing that or taking the pic? #vodka about 8 minutes ago |
![]() | ItsMrRhodes: Annoying mixtapes DJ's always screaming over the song or playing their drops over the song. #neverrrrboyyy about 10 minutes ago |
![]() | theaofspades: it seems to me that near every dj or trance/electronic lovers love @ladygaga ... cant find one who hates her... about 13 minutes ago |
![]() | therealbaileyy: i want to play either DJ Hero or MW2. Hardest decision of the weekend..... about 15 minutes ago |
![]() | dfarley3: RT @jawarspeaks: You could start at the top or the bottom, but for your sake please start somewhere today! Don't wait until 2010. about 16 minutes ago |
| Published July 28, 2005 at 5:41 a.m. |
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Sake Tuesdays at the Redroom has long been an incubator of new talent, a regular stopping point for more established DJs and an opportunity to hear many, many different types of music in the same chill location.
Right now Milwaukee is actually a really good town for DJs and those that love them. The last few years have seen record spins become commonplace and most of the Mil's new DJs, spinning punk to funk, have graced the Redroom's Sake Tuesdays along with the scene's veterans.
Brian Tarney started Sake Tuesdays two years ago in an attempt to buck up a traditionally slow night by bringing in some new sounds and making sake available outside of Japanese restaurants. "At the time we started the night I was really into drinking sake," admits Tarney.
With the exception of "Young Gifted and Black" -- a DJ crew that spins funk, soul, hip hop and dub every last Tuesday of the month (full disclaimer: I'm part of the crew) -- the night is usually scheduled as one-offs to allow for maximum variety.
The DJs that have warmed the Redroom on a cozy night are from all musical walks of life: DJ Spring Break is better known as rapper Kid Millions; Lemonie Fresh hosts an eclectic show on WMSE; Since by Sam plays in a hardcore band of a similar name (Since by Man); bts.wrkng warms the floor for Stereo Total and other hip touring acts and controls the airwaves Monday nights on WMSE.
Tuesdays are now one of the Redroom's busiest nights. The stream of DJs from all corners of the musical universe has brought in a wide range of people and many of them have stayed.
"I would say that the majority of people that attend are regulars" says Tarney, who, when not piloting the bar at the Redroom, books Onopa Brewing Company and DJs as Magnum DJ. "Milwaukee is a very small town. People with the same taste and interests gravitate towards each other very quickly here."
What makes the Redroom unique is the range of people it has brought together. On any given Tuesday night you might stop in for the sake specials and find yourself listening to Swedish psychedelic soul from the '70s, British electro, '80s rock and/or Kanye West.
Although dancing does occasionally break out and tables do sometimes get pushed off to the side, the Redroom is a lounge -- a place to chill, chat and lose track. In the dark womb-like environment surrounded by the late crowd it's easy to forget that it's a Tuesday night, that you're still in Milwaukee, that it's after 1 a.m. and you have to work in the morning.
"The main intent", explains Tarney "is to help expose people to less commercial DJ spins that are not just your typical house or top 40 night." Tarney has gone out of his way to feature new talents as well as new tunes. Milwaukee's smartest working man in show business Flavor Dav may have made his vinyl debut at the Redroom and WMSE's Brentspencer first showed his DJ face there.
"I certainly have seen some amateur DJs grow into pros over the last few years," remarks Tarney.
See for yourself. Invest in the future of quality music in Milwaukee and head down to the Redroom and join the regulars already sippin' on the sake.
Tunes before ten at Sake Tuesday: Brian Tarney's current faves:
Colder -- Heat: Sexy French dubbed-out post-punk.
Pretty Tony -- Jam The Box: Miami electro hip hop pioneer.
The Juan Maclean -- Less Than Human.
"Ghana Soundz" -- A stellar '70s Afro-funk compilation.
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9 comments about this article. Post a comment / write a review. |
Posted by OMCreader on Aug. 4, 2005 at 6:11 p.m. (report)
Tara said: I kind of agree with "No DJ Love." While I like the music, and having a DJ there, often times the music is too loud. I want to go somewhere where I can talk or dance. If there is no dancing, and it is too loud to talk, what are you supposed to do?
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Posted by OMCreader on Aug. 4, 2005 at 12:41 p.m. (report)
Dave said: And, yeah, I think I might have done my first full-on, vinyl only night there. That alone means it's not only hip-hop there, though with people like Malcolm or Kid Millions et al., when so, it's going to be some high quality material. Otherwise, it's anything from 60s sountracks and French pop to 70s glam and krautrock to 80s new wave and electro to 90s electronica and indie to 00s whatever and black dance music of all eras--and that's just if I happen to be at the decks. Others will spin a variety of music ... Thanks, again, Brian, for having us ...
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Posted by OMCreader on Aug. 4, 2005 at 12:28 p.m. (report)
Dave said: Well, you can listen to satellite station or whatever music, or whatever the bartenders throw in the CD player/have on their iPods (not a bad chance to take @ Redroom, between Brian and Steve and Malcolm and Jeff, by the way, but ...), you can scarifice yrself up to the whims of yr fellow patrons on the jukebox, or you can have people who really love music and who are really doing some work digging out what might have remined otherwise unheard gems and pay attention, or not. I'd rather hear something I might not have heard otherwsie, I'd rather not hear something so negilgible I can simply ignore it, so ... So I gots to gets me back to Redroom some Tuesday night but soon, at the bar, behind the turntbales, whatever ...
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Posted by OMCreader on Aug. 3, 2005 at 10:53 a.m. (report)
andy p said: Yes, gangster rap is one of my few complaints about Riverwest bars. I would complain about gangster rap anyway, but I never thought the day would come when I had to leave onopa because the gangster rap was too loud and obnoxious. I didn't know gangster rap was a punk rock/hippie thing.
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Posted by OMCreader on Aug. 3, 2005 at 7:48 a.m. (report)
No DJ Love said: The rapid proliferation of DJs ruining the ambiance of bars and clubs is a nationwide epidemic. I understand the concept of a DJ if it is at a dance club, but most of the local "spin" sessions are just at small, intimate bars. That's no place for anything other than a jukebox or a small jazz trio. Perhaps people wouldn't mind so much if the DJs either a) turned the volume down, or b) played some decent music in lieu of the gangster rap and hip hop noise that all too often resonates from their overamped speakers.
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