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YFM's Warras rocks at Tinker's

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MBABANE – YFM’s DJ Warras proved to locals why he is one of the most respected South African deejays when he held the dancefloor to ‘ransom’.

This was during his hour-long set during the Miniskirt Valentine’s Party which was held at Tinker’s on Friday where the YFM prime time slot hosting deejay was guest together with deejays Voodoo and Twins On Decks.

Screaming

DJ Warras touched the turntables just after midnight, to turn a lousy dancefloor into a place everyone suddenly wanted to be. This, the Durban born spinner, was able to do from his second track of the night right through to the end of his set. When the deejay first took stage, he got ladies screaming, mainly appreciating his looks more than the track he opened with.

When he dished out Professor’s ‘Jezebel’, it was the beginning of his reign.

Even those who had been standing on the sides, watching the dancing from a distance, started trickling in and in no time the dancefloor began overflowing.

Proved

When the equally greatly celebrated DJ Voodoo took stage at around 1:30am, the question was whether or not he would be able to keep the crowd – which seemed a bit too sensitive – on the dancefloor. His opening track proved to be disappointing as the dancefloor got evacuated like it was on fire, but the professional spinner switched to hip hop, which he alternated with dancehall and old skool kwaito, and was able to slowly re-build the dancefloor and keep it rocking up to the end of his set.

The Twins On Decks then took the turntables, being welcomed by screams from the ladies. The dancefloor remained stable at first, but slowly built up to borderline overflowing by the time there was natural light outside, which was when they got off stage.

…but says Swazi crowd is hard to impress

MBABANE – The local club scene bears significant differences from that of neighbouring South Africa, thus very challenging to impress.

This is according to three top South African deejays – Warras and Twins On Decks of YFM - who were playing in the country this past weekend.

During an interview, the top of the house scene deejays - who together call themselves Triple Threat – appreciated the local crowd response but were quick to mention that it’s not an easy crowd to impress.

Nervous

According to DJ Warras, real name Warrick Stock, who hosts one of the prime time shows on South Africa’s top youth radio stations; YFM, playing in Swaziland can be nerve wracking. "For a very accomplished deejay like me, who gives all on the decks, Swaziland is still one of the places where I actually get nervous when I take on the decks. The crowd here is full of surprises and tracks that normally work in Jo’burg or Cape Town, here they evacuate your dancefloor. They just never really feel them," Warras said.

The Twins On Decks agreed with the man who taught them how to deejay by divulging their own observation during their hour-long set on the night: "We think the differences in response can be broadly explained mainly in terms of the tempo of the tracks played.

Withdraw

"While in Jo’burg, you can actually get away with playing a series of euro beats like David Guetta and even faster ones, in Swaziland you just have to stick to the Kwaito inspired House jams. Like tonight, there are tracks we tried to sample but quickly had to withdraw and switch to something closer to home – and those tracks are actually the club hits and crowd pullers in most parts of SA."

"If you can look back at Voodoo’s set; at the beginning he tried to build up from the House I was playing but he started losing people and he realised that soon enough, and that’s perhaps why he jumped onto the genres that hadn’t been touched yet – Hip Hop and Dancehall. That way he was able to keep people on their toes, which is one of the important aspects of deejaying," Warras added.

The deejays went on to hypothesise that the differences in club response could be because of differences in perception.

"The club scene here is predominantly black, so perhaps the reason why you can just about get away with upbeat songs but not to the point where you can build up to playing funk House is that in SA, you also get a sizeable number of whites in the clubs who’ll have cigarettes stuck to their lips and just moving to the beat". All the deejays agreed.

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