Amiable and blonde Kimberly is known as the diva of dance music and enjoys an incredible following in the clubbing circuits of America. Her kick-ass spinning and beautiful hair garnered her the enviable role as the celebrity spokesmodel of the world-renowned Paul Mitchell Systems hair-care line. A genuine love of music led her to deejaying, and now she spends her time flying around the world from party to party making people dance ecstatically with her gift of music
Buff and good-looking, DJ Brett Henrichsen used to be an IBM marketing specialist. His intense love of dance music prompted him to leave the corporate jungle to start his own recording label, Trax Recording. His Masterbeat series became party anthems, and his high-energy and progressive mixes catapulted him to the summit of DJ fame. His sexy presence has since electrified Ibiza, the dance capital of the world, and other top dance playgrounds in Europe and America
I didnt understand this whole phenomenon, and being a musician, I wanted to know the rationale behind it. When the disco (yes, the Gloria Gaynor-Bee Gees disco that we knew) died a natural death, the social landscape was taken over by the café scene. Discos closed and cafés sprouted on every other block. But the need to express oneself through music and dance could not be curtailed and a new movement was born.
Although similar in many ways to the disco but with higher-tech lights, lasers, fog machines, multi-media projections, and production numbers, todays dance events feature new music that was born out of "interactive" technology borrowed from computers. DJs can now eliminate music from vocals, lay them over new rhythm tracks, build in new chord progressions, mix rhythms, and add sound effects and other enhancements. New music terms and categories have sprung world music (ethnic/tribal), house, trance, chill out, etc.
Today, the DJ is the god of the dance arena and he gets as much idolatry and reverence. He programs the selections, mixes, edits and enhances them, and takes people on a dance journey for hours (sometimes, long marathons). The pace, buildup, slowdown, heat up again, and the instantaneous response from the crowd determine the popularity of the DJ. If you dont understand anything thus far, just think of it all as a thriving, new youth culture
A few pounds heavier but still with the same mesmerizing blue eyes (cornered with long eye-shadow under a dramatically drawn eyebrow arch) and red, porcelain doll-like lips, DJ Boy George (or George ODowd, as he prefers to be known) had his Manila audience like marionettes tied to his fingers the moment he stepped onstage. He spun powerful and hypnotic rhythms from three oclock in the morning till early dawn to an enthusiastic crowd at the pulsating NBC Tent
Obviously, Boy George was also bitten by the DJ bug. Like a chameleon, he morphed from a lead singer into a DJ. For him, singing and deejaying are similar they are both a performance aimed at making people have a good time
When I asked him about the transition, he answered in his cool, inimitable voice, "I enjoy it and Im good at it!" As I found out later, "good at it" was an understatement
Last year, he launched his own clothing line called "B-Rude" in New York where he now resides. He describes it as "confrontational, unapologetic, punk, and sexy." This year, he released an autobiographical book entitled Straight (with an accompanying CD), and is now into professional photography, taking shots of his clothing line and of other singers and celebrities
His fan club, BoyFansCanHelp, auctioned off his memorabilia on E-bay, the proceeds of which went to tsunami victims in Southeast Asia. If you think deejaying is not serious work, just check out DJ Boy Georges schedule after Manila. Traveling with his agent Andria Law of Red Parrot Agency in London, hell be deejaying in Singapore, Seoul, Taipei, Jakarta, Shanghai, Beijing, Hong Kong, and Tokyo, staying one or two days at most in each place
Philippine disco icon Louie Ysmael couldnt help but sway to the pulsating rhythm. Brothers Atom and Danby Henares with their dates danced like teenagers. Cosmopolitan Philippines Myrza Sison complained, "What? Boy George right here, and no War is stupid?"
We indeed hope someone will bring back Boy George to Manila to sing Culture Clubs golden hits like Karma Chameleon, Do You Really Want to Hurt Me?, Its a Miracle, Miss Me Blind, The War Song, and Mistake No.3. Now, wont that be a blast?