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Inscrit le: 27 Sep 2011 Messages: 7915 Localisation: England
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Posté le: Mar Sep 17, 2013 5:06 am Sujet du message: I gave him a few tips |
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{Ottawa Senators’ Mika Zibanejad turns the tables as DJ Z-Bad}
OTTAWA — Mika Zibanejad is nervous.The 20-year-old former first-round pick of the Ottawa Senators has been training all summer for this. He says he’s been spending three to four hours,[url=http://www.toms-shoes-sale.com]Toms Shoes Sale[/url], almost daily, working on his craft. But he’s still nervous.“It’s all about timing. The more you do it, the more you practise, the more you get what’s going on,[url=http://www.toms-shoes-sale.com]Cheap Toms[/url],” he says.The NHL preseason begins in just more than two weeks,[url=http://www.toms-shoes-sale.com]Cheap Toms[/url],[url=http://www.toms-shoes-sale.com]Toms Shoes Outlet[/url], but Zibanejad isn’t talking about hockey. No,[url=http://www.toms-shoes-sale.com]Toms Shoes Outlet[/url], he’s talking about Friday night at Junxion nightclub, where his new alter ego, DJ Z-Bad, will be making his debut.“I think if you’re not nervous, you’re not excited for it,” he says. “It will be more nerve-racking once I stand there and people are watching. Right now,[url=http://www.toms-shoes-sale.com]Toms Shoes Sale[/url], I am just trying to calm myself down and save the stress and nerves for later.”Zibanejad says his brother is a DJ back home in Sweden and he tried it out last year while visiting and got hooked.“I’m very into house music. It’s something I’ve been listening to a lot and something I have a passion for,” he says.He cites Swedish House Mafia and Hardwell as two of his favourites.When he started DJing, it was just something he did to unwind at home and take his mind off hockey. But as he began to practise more and more, he decided he wanted to put on a charity DJ show to raise money for the Ottawa Boys and Girls Club, an organization to which the Senators often contribute.But he realized making the transition from mixing music at home to playing for a crowd wouldn’t be so simple.“He was really humble and eager to learn,” says Paul Burke, who’s Junxion’s resident DJ on Friday nights and who’s been teaching Zibanejad this summer. “He brought his own music, I gave him a few tips, and then it kind of spiralled from there.”Burke says learning to be a DJ takes work and isn’t something that comes overnight or can be learned in a classroom. He says that often people who have limited experience but have celebrity star power think they can just come in and make magic happen spinning on the ones and twos.“I’ve worked at a lot of shows and seen a bunch of different people DJ,” Burke says. “I saw Nick Carter DJ at an event I was at. And let’s just say it wasn’t very good. Just because you can be in a boy band doesn’t mean you can be a DJ.“I’ve seen Playboy models DJ, and it’s a lot about, ‘Look at me. I’m wearing lingerie.’ It doesn’t matter.”But Burke says his NHL pupil wasn’t like that. He explains that Zibanejad takes it seriously and isn’t resting on his laurels as a pro hockey player.“He’s actually a fairly good DJ for how much experience he has and that he’s going into his first show,” he says. “The majority of the DJs in Ottawa still aren’t as good as he is right now.”Junxion general manager Andrew Hamilton expects his club to be packed with fist-pumpers on Friday night. He says there’s been a buzz growing since Zibanejad announced the show.“We hold up to 300 people,” he says. “It’s going to be absolutely crazy in here.”DJ Z-Bad will be setting up behind the turntables at around 11:30 p.m. He says it will unfortunately be his last gig for awhile because he doesn’t plan on performing throughout the hockey season. _________________ People watching the forthcoming beginning of the German half of the inhabitants of Berlin are no interested in co-optation |
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