Saturday, October 27, 2012

Great Halloween Costume Ideas

Great Halloween Costumes and Costume Ideas

Check out a few well done costumes and do it yourself cosplay costumes from Halloween and COSPLAY conventions.
Halo Reach Halloween Costume
Halo Reach Halloween Costume

Female Ghost Pirate Costume
Female Ghost Pirate Costume

Skeleton Dia De Los Muertos Bride and Groom Halloween Costumes
Skeleton Dia De Los Muertos Bride and Groom Halloween Costumes

Pumpkin Head Costume
Pumpkin Head Costume

Starcraft Costume
Starcraft Costume

Starcraft Costume
Starcraft Costume

Starcraft Costume Eyes
Starcraft Costume Eyes

Toy Soldier Adult Costume
Toy Soldier Adult Costume

Batman DR Freeze Costume
Batman DR Freeze Costume

Friday, August 03, 2012

Tiesto, Skrillex, Deadmau5, Afrojack Among The Highest Paid DJs in The World

Tiesto, Skrillex and Swedish House Mafia are in the top 3 Highest Paid DJs in The World, followed closely by David Guetta, Steve Aoki and Deadmau5.

Tiesto in His Favorite Jesus Pose

Tiesto in His Favorite Jesus Pose as other DJs have Dubbed it


Skrillex More Monsters and Sprites Remixes


Skrillex At Work In The Club

Swedish House Mafia

Deadmau5 at work in the Club

Deadmau5 and His Infamous Light Cube Touring DJ Booth



Forbes has released a list of the top-earning DJ and TiestoSkrillex and Swedish House Mafia has at the top. The list, titled “Top 10 Electronic Cash Kings,” determines the biggest earners in the dance music genre by culling together the musicians’ concert and festival performances.
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Tiesto comes in at No. 1, earning $22 million in the past year. The DJ earns an average of $250,000 per night, according to Forbes. Unsurprisingly Skrillex comes in at No. 1, netting $15 million, while Swedish House Mafia scored the No. 3 spot with $14 million. Other DJs in the Top 10 include David Guetta ($13.5 million),Deadmau5 ($11.5 million) and Jersey Shore star DJ Pauly D ($11 million). Check out the full list below:
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1. Tiësto – $22m
2. Skrillex – $15m
3. Swedish House Mafia – $14m
4. David Guetta – $13.5m
5. Steve Aoki – $12m
6. Deadmau5 – $11.5m
7. DJ Pauly D – $11m
8. Kaskade – $10m
9. Afrojack – $9m
10. Avicii – $7m
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This makes us feel like we should probably start making dub-step music, if only for the cash. 

Skrillex told Forbes“I’ve been listening to electronic music since I was 12. Even when I played in rock bands, I’ve been making it… This is the first time it’s gotten so big.” 

Tiesto added, “I think what really changed was social media. Twitter, Facebook really helped a lot. It exposed things to a whole new world. Before that you only could hear [electronic dance music] on the radio at night. Day-time radio would never play it.”

These numbers shouldn’t necessarily be surprising when you consider just how popular EDM has become over the past few years. Most of the DJs on the list are called in to headline major festivals now and Kaskade recently became the first DJ to sell out the Staples Center in Los Angeles, an honor usually reserved for major rock and pop acts. But still we’re pretty blown away to see just how many millions these guys (and yes, unfortunately, they’re all guys) are earning. What do you think about how much DJs are earning these days? Tell us in the comments. 
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Feel It In My Bones

Tiësto | Myspace Music Videos



Thursday, June 14, 2012

Drake and Chris Brown Go To Blows at a NYC Nightclub

Drake, Chris Brown and Meek Mill Go to blows in a New York City After Hours Nightclub

Rapper Drake of Young Money and his entourage got into a FIGHT . . . with CHRIS BROWN at the popular AFTER HOURS NYC nightclub WIP.


Rapper Drake and RNB Singer Chris Brown got into a Fight at a Club in New York City


Rapper Drake and RNB Singer Chris Brown got into a Fight at a Club in New York City


According to MULTIPLE MediaTakeOut.com snitches inside, Chris and Drake have had a DIFFICULT relationship since three years ago - when Rihanna CHEATED on Chris, with Drake. Chris has HELD A GRUDGE against Drake for years.

Well last night at WIP, we're told that Chris reportedly sent over a bottle of champagne to Drake's table, as a sort of peace offering. We're not sure WHAT happened next, there are UNCONFIRMED REPORTS that Drake sent the bottle back to Chris Brown with a message to the effect of - "I'm f*ckng the love of your life [Rihanna], deal with it." 

Whatever message Drake actually sent back caused Chris Brown to immediately fly into a rage - and he confronted Drake and his entourage - which included yet another Chris Brown rival, rapper Meek Mill. Meek Mill also had a relationship with Rihanna, which increased the awkwardness of the situation. Well according the public snitch, Drake punched Chris in the face and before Chris could retaliate, someone popped Chris Brown in the mouth with a bottle, multiple times, giving new meaning to VIP Bottle Service. As a result Chris Brown's face was LEAKING LIKE A FAUCET!


Chris Brown's Face after the Fight
Meek Mill Stated on Twitter that it wasn't him that threw the bottle
Meek Mill Tweeted on Twitter after the incident Stating it wasn't him that threw the bottle at Chris Brown TMZ later reported in more detail: Stating that Drake wasn’t involved in the altercation, but it was Meek Mill who hit Chris Brown with the bottle.
  • Chris Brown and Drake had been hanging out in the VIP section … when Drake began pointing and yelling at Brown.
  • Chris Brown began yelling back … and that’s when members of both entourages rushed in and began shoving each other.
  • With tensions running high, someone threw a bottle (who people said turned out to be Meek Mill) — which set the whole thing off … and the shoving turned to punches
  • Club security rushed in to break up the fight … and called police for backup. Brown and Drake left the scene by the time cops showed up … but several members of their entourages remained at the club. Multiple members of both crews required medical assistance.
WIP Nightclub looked Whooped after the fight between Chris Brown and Drake


Chris Brown Later tweeted about the situation, calling out Drake's and Meek Mill's people stating that they were throwing bottles like girls.

Sunday, March 04, 2012

Snoop Dogg Concert Delivered a Great Time

Snoop Dogg Concert Was a Great Time For All of Denver

From the first time I heard him Spitting alongside Dr. Dre on the Title track from the "Deep Cover" soundtrack singing "yeah and you don't stop cause 187 on an un dercover cop" followed closely by another Classic Dr. Dre and Snoop track "G Thang" I instantly knew Snoop Dogg was going to be a major player in the rap game. Many of his first tracks are still played heavily in nightclubs around the world along with of course his much later hits. With so many great memorable hits it's no surprise that Snoop Dogg puts on a great show live.

Concerts are always great when the audience can sing along to certain parts of each song. And at the Fillmore this past Friday the audience was full into the show singing along to Snoop Dogg's Greatest Hits.

Snoop even brought up some super sexy females to dance to his Song "Beautiful" and one of the finest of the females stayed up for a special demonstration of her  T-pain style Booty Wurk and she did not disappoint. Unfortunately I was not allowed to bring in my professional grade camera so all I have are crappy I-Phone pictures and videos that just don't do her or the concert justice. But she was BAD to the bone!

Snoop Dogg Chilling In His Tour Bus Playing Xbox with Two Sexy Ladies

The appearance by Kurupt was an added bonus that made some of the old School Snoop Dogg and Kurupt songs really pop out more. In addition, Snoop recently released his Collaboration Album with Wiz Khalifa entitled "Mac & Devin Go to High School" (also Known as School Dayz by some) and one of the biggest hits off the album and one of the biggest current hits on the radio right now "Young Wild and Free" was also one of the most fun songs to sing along to. The entire audience put up their lighters or clapped along as they sung along to the lyrics of the chorus. So the concert ended on a high note with everyone in high spirits (in more ways than one)

Overall it was a great concert and we all had a blast. Snoop Dogg always delivers!
Make sure to get his new album with Wiz Khalifa available in stores and online now!

DJ Vajra The Makings of a DMC Champion

I was always amazed by the sheer technical skill and ability of DJ Vajra.
I have watched DJ Vajra since the early days of his DJ battle Career in the 2000, 2001 DMC and Guitar Center DJ battles in Colorado and Texas. 

Whenever he scratched, you could immediately tell that he put in some serious practice hours because his scratches were always very clean, fluid and diverse. If battles were judged purely on technical ability and  scratches he would have won most of his early battles hands down, cause there was no doubt he had the technical side of turntablism down to a science, often much better than his competitors. 

Even as early as 2001 I could see his abilities were at the level of the world champions, so I had imagined that if he stayed the course, he would one day take the ultimate title in turntablism. It would be a full decade later that DJ Vajra would prove my thoughts correct and earn the title of DMC World Champ. Having built up a huge arsenal of technical ability in beat juggles and scratches and finally adding in the minor spices of showmanship and a routine that would get the crowd behind him, DJ Vajra took the stage of the 2011 DMC World DJ battle and made it his, becoming the 2011 DMC Champion.

Below is an interview conducted by SERATO.com where they interview DJ Vajra about his evolution as a DJ, Scratch Artist, Music Producer and DJ Battle Champion.

How did you get into DJing?
When I was a little kid, about nine years old, I saw Yo MTV raps for the first time and that was the first time that I’d seen or heard scratching, and I thought it was really cool. When my parents would leave the house, I would put on my Muppet Show records, and John Denver records and try to figure out how to make the same sounds. Of course, I didn’t have a crossfader, so I never understood that part of the equation; all I knew was back and forth.


DJ Vajra in London Taking The 2011 DMC World Champion Title and Bringing it Back to The United States

A few years later, Def Comedy Jam came on TV and I had a good friend named Paul Michaeloff and he said, “I want to get turntables like Kid Capri!” So he went out and bought Technics 1200 and we both started spending all of our time going to the record store, buying vinyl, tapes, cds - pretending we had our own radio show. He was really interested in mixing, but I just really always wanted to try and scratch. He would always say “You’re going to break the needle!” and wasn’t too into the idea of me scratching on his equipment.

DJ Vajra 2011 DMC  DJ Battle World Champion

The thought of actually being a DJ never even crossed my mind, so I gave all my records (about a crate and a half) to Paul when I moved from Indiana to Colorado.

At school in Colorado, I was introduced to this kid named Mike Moen. We started talking about music, we like the same things and he says “I’m a DJ, I have Technics 1200s at my house,” and I said immediately “I’m coming to your house! This weekend! I’m coming over!”

I went over to his house and he showed me the first DMC video I ever saw, which was a bootleg video of the 95 East Coast, West Coast, US and World finals, all on one tape. We watched the whole thing, all six hours of it, straight through and I was completely blown away. I just knew instantly that that was what I wanted to do.

DJ Vajra 2011 DMC DJ World Championship DJ Battle London England

What was your first DJ setup?

My sister worked with a Junglist named DJ Pepper and she told him I wanted to get into DJing. He had an extra turntable and offered to sell it to me for $20. My friend Mike sold me an MTX Battleboard 2 Mixer and that was my first setup.

I was walking down the street, two months later and I saw a turntable in a garbage pile. I picked it up, took it home, plugged it in and I could hear something moving. I didn’t know how it worked or anything like that, so I figured out how to take it apart. I saw the belt, and tried to connect it but it kept slipping off. So I made a belt out of electrical tape, and it worked! It would hold pitch and that was my setup that I had for a little over a year.

How did you get involved in the DMCs?
Colorado’s not really a hip hop mecca, so the first time the DMCs came was in 99. At the time, all my friends were telling me to enter, but all I had ever seen was the best (the finals video) so I was like “Hell no, I’m not gonna compete, I might look stupid in front of these guys.”

I went to that battle, and I left feeling that I wouldn’t have been the worst person in that battle. I made a decision at that point that I was going to enter every battle that happened.

I entered a couple of battles that year - won a few, lost a few. Did my first DMC in Lawrence, Kansas in 2000 and made top six, which was my goal. Then I went and did the one in Boulder and made it top six in that one too, so I’m thinking “Alright, cool, I’m gonna come back next year and try and get in the top three.” That was my goal I wanted to step it up every year.

2001 came around and I decided to do Boulder and a month after, Chicago - you could enter two regionals at this point. I’m thinking I got to go to a big regional this time (Chicago), I gotta see how I compare to the big dogs. I bought my ticket to Chicago, and had plans to go out and stay with DJ Spryte, who I met in Kanas the year before and I was really excited to go battle out here. I did the Boulder regional and I won!

I was really surprised, and was a little bit bummed out that I didn’t get to compete in Chicago because I didn’t have to anymore. I knew at the time that I wasn’t ready to be in the US Finals. I was really freaking out, and I just had to come to grips with the facts that, alright, I have no chance of winning this year, so I’m just going to start working for next year.

I went up and did the set that I had prepared and said, “next year, I want to make it back and do even better.”

Next year, I went to Austin, Texas, competed in the regional down there and ended up winning. That was the first battle that I ever won outside of Colorado.


I went back to the US Finals that year and beforehand, decided that I wanted to do even better and place in the top three. It was a harder road the next time around, flew to Seattle 2003, brought all my gear with me by myself.

The battle had crazy technical issues, and I lost to DJ Ace by one point. I’m thinking at that point that I can’t afford to do another regional, so I figured I wasn’t going back to the US finals. Another regional ended up coming up in Austin, Texas again so I had one more chance.

I scraped the money together, and flew down to Austin. This time everyone remembered me from the year before and they were not happy that I was there to win their regional again. I ended up winning but I got booed when they announced it. But the point was making it back to the US Finals.

So I went back to the US Finals in 2003, this time in D.C., and I got second place to DJ Enferno.

I came back the next year, and took a bad approach to my set. I didn’t put anything for the crowd in it and was hoping I could win with a pure technical set and I ended up getting 3rd place. That was the first time that I’d taken a step backwards - from 2nd place to 3rd place. I’ve always had the goal of trying to improve and this year I took a step back. So I stopped battling for six years.

What made you come back to compete again?
When I came back this year, I just wanted to have that forum for what my form of creative expression is: turntablism. There really aren’t a lot of forums for that anymore, I can’t go to the club and do that. I was still scratching, juggling and drumming all the time, but it was always with my friends, behind closed doors and hanging out.

I felt like I had a lot of things that I wanted to share with people who were fans of turntablism, ideas that no one had thought of yet and that was really the only forum for it. DMC is the only forum for it really, unless you’re one of the select few people who actually get booked to do turntable shows.

This year, the moment I heard they were going to allow digital in the DMC, I knew instantly that I wanted to compete again because I had ideas that I wanted to be able to do that just weren’t possible with vinyl. If it wasn’t for that, if they hadn’t changed that rule, there's absolutely zero chance I would’ve come back and competed ever again.

How did you put your routine together for the DMCs this year?

The process this year, putting the routine together itself, a lot of it just happened by accident. For instance, the routine that I ended my set with where it goes faster and faster and faster - that was not even meant to be a routine when I came up with it. That was something I was working on for a mixtape. The beat itself already got faster on its own, I didn’t do that, it’s just something I came across by this group called “The Secret Lemon Project.”

I edited it down for the mixtape and I started scratching over it, to see how it flows. When I tested the routine out at home, I thought it would really work in a show. So I went out and I did it at a show and people went crazy. At that moment, I knew I could do this in a battle, so I put it away and didn’t do it again at all for six months, until the next battle/DMC rolled around.




As far as the rest of the routine goes, that stuff doesn’t exist on vinyl. You can’t do it with vinyl, because it doesn’t exist on vinyl. All this stuff, I made it myself. To be able to have one computer that I recorded everything onto, then I arranged everything with, then I go out and DJ with that same computer - that is what really allows me to be fully creative when I’m putting the set together. Every idea I have, I don’t have to just say “Oh, I hope I can find this sound on record” or “I hope I can find something exactly like how I picture it in my brain” - I can just make it.

There’s a drum routine in my world final set where I went to the studio and recorded with the guitarist from The Flobots. I knew what I wanted in my head, I’d already put together the drum part. I just played on the piano what I wanted him to do at what times and he laid it down. Then I went back and added some percussion elements to it and basically created my own track, and then did a routine on top of it.

What do you think of the whole routines with digital vinyl systems vs. routines on real vinyl?
I guess some people would argue that I could do the exact same routine and press it on vinyl, and it would be more of a purist thing. But fuck that. There’s no point. I don’t see the point to it. I’m not going to sacrifice the sound quality and the depth of the sound that I can get with digital. I’m not going to risk needle skipping just because people think that’s keeping it real. When the record skips, that’s not keeping it real.

I think the audience deserves better than that. They deserve to see peoples’ routines as they were meant to be. That’s much easier to accomplish with digital than it is with vinyl.

What about the producer side of what you do - any plans for more production in 2012?
I got really heavy into producing for about five years. I took it very seriously, I learned a lot. I got into a Red Bull Music Labs (not be confused with RBMA), and I learned how to make beats from Bassnectar. So I took that very seriously for about five years.

I entered in the Red Bull Big Tune beat battles two years in a row. The first time, I did my whole thing in one day because the organisers rang me the day before to invite me to compete. I was a tie-breaker away from going to the US finals from one day of preparation. I thought it was worth trying again next year and made it to the semi-finals again.

I left that competition feeling like I was a good producer, but I wasn't a great producer. I didn’t want to be jack of all trades, master of none. I decided at that point I would put my energy back into doing something I felt I had the most potential to be great at which was scratching/DJing. And I completely recommitted myself to that, and I haven’t made a beat since then.

But for 2012, I would like to make beats again. I feel like I don’t really have anything else to prove as a DJ. Once you win the DMC World title, no one can really question your ability as a DJ anymore - it’s already set in stone. Now I can go back to production.

I’d like to put out an instrumental album in 2012. I have these grand dreams of putting together a multimedia show that I could do at festivals, and try and bring some ideas to that sort of a stage that haven’t been done before.

So yeah, for 2012, I just want to produce, do more shows and have fun.


Tuesday, February 28, 2012

Snoop Dogg Concert March 2nd Denver

Snoop Dogg Concert March 2nd 2012 athe The Fillmore Auditorium

Friday March 2nd 7pm Make sure you catch One of the Living Legends of Rap, Snoop Dogg live in concert at the Fillmore Theatre. Tickets are available at www.livenation.com or Charge By Phone at 800-745-3000

Thursday, January 26, 2012

Valentines Concert featuring Jon B at The Gothic Theatre Denver

Valentine's Concert featuring Jon B at The Gothic Theatre Denver

Valentines Day can sometimes be hard to plan for, especially for couples that have seen more than one Valentine's day together. Coming up with new ideas every year to surprise and elate your honey can become difficult. This year if you happen to live in Denver, start off early with a Pre Valentines Day Concert featuring RNB legend Jon B. at The Gothic Thetre Denver CO. Saturday February 11th 2012

Get Tickets at www.Ticketswest.com www.GothicTheatre.com www.Jammin1015.com at all Colorado King Soopers Stores or Charge By Phone at 1-800-325-7328